Progression of bowel endometriosis during treatment with the oral contraceptive pill

In: Gynecological Surgery · 2010 · vol. 8(3) , pp. 311–313 · doi:10.1007/s10397-010-0610-3 · W2040896659
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This case report presents evidence of bowel endometriosis progression during oral contraceptive pill use, contrary to prior assumptions about endocrine therapies preventing lesion growth.

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This paper reports a single patient with rectosigmoid bowel endometriosis whose lesion progressed despite continuous oral contraceptive pill therapy. After initial diagnosis in 2005 by multidetector CT enteroclysis showed a small sigmoid endometriotic nodule limited to the serosal surface, the patient refused surgical excision and used continuous desogestrel/ethinylestradiol; she was lost to follow-up and returned in 2009 with worsening pain and gastrointestinal symptoms, at which point magnetic resonance enteroclysis showed a larger nodule at the same site. Surgical resection later confirmed histologically that the lesion had progressed to reach the bowel submucosa and submucosal nervous plexus, while acknowledging a limitation that the initial diagnosis was not based on surgery and histology (though the authors argue CT enteroclysis is generally accurate for lesion depth, with possible underestimation for submucosal involvement). This paper is centrally about endometriosis — it documents progression of bowel endometriosis during oral contraceptive pill treatment and discusses implications for managing colorectal endometriosis.

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Introduction

Bowel endometriosis affects between 3.8% and 37% of women with endometriosis [1]. The extent of bowel endometriotic nodules is variable; smaller nodules infiltrate only the intestinal serosa and the subserous fat tissue, whereas larger lesions may infiltrate the muscular layer of the bowel and reach the submucosa or the mucosa. The depth of infiltration of the endometriotic nodules in the bowel wall has been correlated with the severity of symptoms [2]. Small endometriotic nodules infiltrating only the serosal surface rarely cause symptoms [2]. Larger nodules may cause abdominal pain and a wide range of intestinal symptoms including dyschezia, diarrhea, constipation, abdominal bloating, painful bowel movements and cyclical rectal bleeding [1–3]. It is well known that the surgical excision of bowel endometriosis determines an improvement in pain, intestinal symptoms and quality of life [4–7]. However, patients with bowel endometriosis may want to avoid or postpone surgery. Therefore, endocrine therapies (such as gonadotropin releasing hormone analogs, progestins and aromatase inhibitors) have recently been proposed for the treatment of pain and intestinal symptoms of patients with bowel endometriosis [8–10]. However, limited data are available on the natural history of bowel endometriotic nodules; in particular, there is no evidence that these lesions may progress during endocrine therapies [1]. In this report, we present the evidence of progression of bowel endometriosis during the use of endocrine therapy.

Methods

and findings A 25-year-old woman was referred to our endometriosis center in 2005. She complained of dysmenorrhea and deep dyspareunia; she had no gastrointestinal symptom. She had never previously used hormonal treatments for endometriosis. The gynecological examination and transvaginal ultrasonography revealed the presence of a 2.5-cm rectovaginal nodule. The patient underwent multidetector computerized tomography enteroclysis (MDCT-e). The exam revealed the presence of a small sigmoid endometriotic nodule of the serosal surface that did not infiltrate the muscularis propria. The nodule was clearly visible during the exam as a retraction of the serosal surface of the sigmoid colon despite the optimal distension (Fig. 1). The patient refused the surgical excision of endometriosis and decided to use continuous oral contraceptive pill (desogestrel 150 μg and ethinylestradiol 20 μg; Mercilon, Rome, Italy). The patient was lost to follow-up until February 2009 when she had a consultation at our center because of pain and persistent gastrointestinal symptoms of increasing severity (constipation and dyschezia); she was still under continuous oral contraceptive pill. Magnetic resonance enteroclysis (MR-e) was performed. The exam revealed the presence of a large sigmoid nodule in the same site where, 41 months before, MDCT-e revealed the small serosal sigmoid nodule (Fig. 1). Hormonal therapy was continued until laparoscopy; the presence of the sigmoid endometriotic nodule was confirmed and it was excised by bowel resection. The histological examination of the bowel specimen demonstrated that the endometriotic nodule reached the bowel submucosa; the immunohistochemical staining with S100 showed that the infiltration reached the submucosal (Meissner) nervous plexus. The postoperative course was uneventful and the patient was discharged 5 days after surgery.

Conclusion

Until now, there has been no evidence of progression of bowel endometriosis despite the use of endocrine therapies. This report shows, for the first time, that the oral contraceptive pill does not prevent the progression of bowel endometriosis. Nowadays, modern radiological techniques and transvaginal ultrasonography often allow a non-invasive diagnosis of rectosigmoid endometriosis [1, 11, 12]. These patients should be fully informed of the potential benefits and limitations of endocrine and surgical therapies. In particular, patients refusing surgery and using medical treatments may have an improvement in pain and intestinal symptoms [8–10]; however, they should be aware that a silent progression of bowel endometriotic nodules might occur despite endocrine treatments. Furthermore, these patients should be carefully monitored for potential progression of intestinal lesions. A limitation of this case report consists in the fact that the first diagnosis of sigmoid endometriosis was based on MDCT-e and not on surgery and histology. However, previous studies demonstrated that MDCT-e has high sensibility and specificity for detecting intestinal endometriotic lesions and for determining the depth of infiltration of the nodules in the bowel wall [13–15]. A prospective study including 98 women showed that MDCT-e is reliable in identifying the depth of infiltration of serosal and muscular lesions, while an underestimation of the lesions reaching the submucosa may be observed [13]. In conclusion, to the best of our knowledge, this case report demonstrates for the first time that a progression of bowel endometriosis might occur despite hormonal therapies. This information should be given to all women choosing to avoid the surgical excision of colorectal endometriosis.

References

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