Title: New Treatments for Uterine fibroids
1New Treatments for Uterine fibroids
- Prof Mary Ann Lumsden
- Prof of Gynaecology and Medical Education
- February 2013
2Background
- Commonest benign tumour
- Incidence 25-40
- 50 asymptomatic
- Malignant potential lt 1
- Main aim of treatment
- symptom relief and improve quality of life
- Clinical symptom
- - menorrhagia /- dysmenorrhea
- - reproductive dysfunction
- - bulk-related
- Treatment options
- - surgical
- - medical
- - minimally invasive surgical non-surgical
techniques -
3Uterine fibroids and fertility
- Systematic Reviews to assess effect of myomectomy
on fertility. - Systematic review and metanalysis of controlled
studies - Sub-mucosal fibroids decreased clinical pregnancy
and implantation rates compared with infertile
controls without fibroids. - Intra-mural fibroids decreased fertility and
increased pregnancy loss compared with women with
no fibroids. - Sub-serosal fibroids had no effect on fertility
and myomectomy had no beneficial effect in this
group - (Pritts et al Fertil Steril 2009 Klatsky et al
Am J Obstet Gynecol 2008 Somigliana et al 2007)
4Mean SF36 scores for women with symptomatic and
age-matched women in the normal population
N 47
5Uterine Fibroids are costly
Estimated annual US spend 6-34 billion
Source Cardozo E, Segars J et al. Estimated
annual cost of uterine leiomyomata in US.
American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology,
March 2012. published online Dec 2011
6Diagnosis
7MRI vs Ultrasound
- Symptoms
- Examination
- MRI
- USS
8Fibroid Imaging
Ultrasound
MRI
9Uterine Fibroids - Coronal image
10Currently available therapies
- Surgical
- Hysterectomy (Abdominal/Vaginal/LAVH)
- Myomectomy (Abdominal/Endoscopic)
- Medical
- Symptom control
- Gonadotrophin releasing hormone agonists
- Uterine artery embolisation
11Surgery
12Hysterectomy
- Very successful option
- Amenorrhoea guaranteed
- Appropriate where pathology present
- Allows oophorectomy where appropriate
- but
- small but significant mortality
- significant morbidity
13Hysterectomy
- Mortality of 1/1000-2000
- VALUE audit 14/37,000
- Major complications in 3
- Minor complications in 15 - 30
- but
- Level of satisfaction high
- A new treatment needs to be very effective to be
better
14Fig. 1
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17Developing Therapies
MR Guided Thermal Ablation vaporisation Laser
ablation Focused Ultrasound (FUS)
- Medical Interferon-?
- SPRModulators Asoprosnil
- Anti-progesterones (RU486)
18Progesterone Receptor Modulators
- Agonist and antagonistic effects of progesterone
- Bind principally to progesterone receptor
- Little effect on ovarian function
- Act directly on endometrium (mainly on blood
vessels) - Induce amenorrhoea
- Shrink fibroids by 20-40
- Well tolerated
19Clinical Effect
20Ulipristal Acetate vs placebo- PEARL 1
Donnez et al 2012
21Ulipristal Acetate vs GnRH agonist PEARL 2
Donnez et al 2012
22Progesterone Receptor Modulators
- Conclusion
- Significant decrease in menstrual blood loss
- Minimal spotting and breakthrough bleeding
- Modest decrease in uterine size
- Well tolerated
- Cause unusual effects on the endometrium
23Minimally Invasive Techniques
- Uterine artery embolisation
- High Intensity Focused Ultrasound (HIFU)
- MRI-guided laser ablation
- Myolysis
- Laparoscopic occlusion of uterine vessels
24High Intensity Focused Ultrasound
25- Accurate target just the tumour
- Non-invasive
- Avoid general anesthesia
- Low complication rate
- Low side-effect profile
- Preserve fertility
- Cost-effective
26Ultrasound pathway into fibroid
- Ensures safety and accuracy of targeting
- Bowel, bone or scar in pathway is an absolute
contraindication
27Treatment Plan
FUS planned using axial MR images. Each green
circle represents an individual treatment pulse
or sonication, to build up a confluent lesion
28Post treatment
Gadolinium enhanced MRI showing Non-Perfused
Volume
29Post treatment Sagittal View
Non - perfused area ringed in yellow
30Outcome after MRgFUS No serosal damage or
adhesions
Myomectomy 6 weeks post MR-guided ablation
31MRgFUS - Pain Experienced
32Symptom Reduction - Timescale
MRgFUS uterine fibroids
33Adverse Events
- Mild and self limiting
- Leg or Buttock pain
- UTI (1)
- Skin burn (lt 1)
- NO serious infective complications
- NO Emergency hysterectomy
- One overnight admission in 6 years
34July 1st 2012 Post MR guided FUS Pregnancy data
Total no. pregnancies 109 (105 patients)
Mean age (range) 36.1 (27-49)years
Months to conception 8.8 TOTAL
deliveries 59 Term vaginal 38 Term
C-Section 21 Elective TOP 10 Miscarriages 22
(20) Ongoing pregnancies 18 Mean delivery
weight 3.3kg
Insightec central register
35Comparison of Mode of Delivery after MRgFUS
Complication General Population Fibroid Patients UAE Laparoscopic Myomectomy MRgFUS
Caesarean Delivery 22 48.5 66 77.8 36
Preterm Delivery 5-10 16 14 7.4 5
Potential savings to healthcare system Fewer
preterm deliveries and operative deliveries
Lower cost care of premature babies (average
lifetime cost preterm baby is 57,458) Lower cost
to healthcare system, where (average cost of
c-section is 13 - 20,298)
- References Cardozo E, Segars J et al. Estimated
annual cost of uterine leiomyomata in US. AJOG,
March 2012. - J. GoldbergL Pereira. Pregnancy outcomes
following treatment for fibroids UAE versus
laparoscopic myomectomy, ObstetGynecol2006,
184024 - H. Homer, E. Saridogan, UAE for fibroids is
associated with an increased risk of miscarriage,
Fertility and Sterility 2009 - J. Rabinovici et al. Pregnancy outcomes after
MRgFUS for conservative treatment of uterine
fibroids, Fertility and Sterility 2008. - Miller CE. Unmet Therapeutic Needs for Uterine
Myomas. J Minimally Invasive Gynecol. 200916
11-21.
36Of these 280 MRgFUS patients
- 5 Hysterectomies 1 within 1 year of MRgFUS,
- 5 within 2 years
- 6 Myomectomies 1 within 6 months of MRgFUS,
- 4 within 1 year
- 2 within 2 years
- 11 Uterine Artery Embolisations
- 1 within 6 months of MRgFUS,
- 3 within 1 year
- 11 within 2 years
- TOTAL 28 (10) re-intervention rate
37MRgHIFU
- Not suitable for large fibroids
- Not suitable for large numbers of fibroids
- Impact on recurrence rate unclear
- Modest effect on size
- Impact on menstrual blood less than UAE
38Uterine Artery Embolisation
39Procedure
40Uterine artery embolisation
Pre
Post
Image courtesy of Dr J Moss, Dept Of Radiology,
GGH.
41Impact of UAE on size
42Median reduction in Menstrual Blood Loss
43NEJM 2007356360-70
44REST Trialearly outcomes (12 months)(REST)
- Quality of life (QoL) equal to surgery
- reduced hospital stay
- more rapid recovery
- patient satisfaction very high both groups
- symptom scores better with surgery
- complication rates similar
- UAE more cost effective
- re-intervention rate 13 vs 4
45Quality of Life Scores Mean SF36 scores
pre-treatment and age-matched women in the
normal population
46Mean SF scores at 5 years post treatment and age
matched women in the normal population
100
90
80
70
60
50
40
30
Normative Embolisation Surgery
20
10
0
Physical functioning
Role limitation physical
Bodily pain
General health
Vitality
Social functioning
Role limitationemotional
Mental health
47Minor complications
UAE
Surgery
27
44
Total complications
p ns
48Major adverse events
UAE
Surgery
1 year women
10 (20)
13 (12)
5 year women
7 (7)
3 (6)
Total adverse events
20 (19)
13 (25)
p ns
49Major adverse events
UAE
Surgery
bleed, anaesthetic, sepsis,retention, wound
vasovagal
Hospital stay
1 year
wound
sepsis, expulsion, pain,breast cancer,
amenorrhoea
5 years
MND death, anal sphincter repair, UTI
expulsion, cancer death, hysterectomy, laparoscopy
50Re-interventions
hysterectomy, UAE, myomectomy, endometrial
ablation
Treatment failure(????)
Complications(???)
Total re-interventions(?????)
51Intervention for treatment failure
Surgery
UAE
1 (2)
Total
28 (26)
52REST Trial 5 year Follow Up
53Cost utility analysis
Surgery
Mean difference (95CI)
UAE
1751
1 year
2702
948 (398-1432)
2467
2961
5 years
554 (-43-1173)
Initial cost benefit at 1 year lost
54Summary
- UAE offers more rapid recovery and shorter stay
- Complication profile similar to surgery
- QoL gain equal to surgery
- Re-intervention rate significantly higher
- Cost neutral with surgery at 5 years
- High satisfaction score both procedures
55Uterine Artery EmbolisationFertility
- Particles reaching ovary
- Global reduction in ovarian blood flow
- Temporary amenorrhoea relatively common
- Permanent amenorrhoea 1-2
- Fertility outcome?
- Endometrial atrophy (normal FSH)
56Pregnancy Complications
Normal Population UAE
IUGR 5 3
Preterm Delivery 5- 10 18, 13
PPH 5 18, 15, 20
LSCS Walker et al 2006, Dutton et al 2007 22 67, 72, 80
57REST TrialOvarian Failure post Treatment
UAE Surgical
gt40 years 0 0
gt 40 years 13 (14 gt 45 years) 3
58Conclusions
- UAE is successful in treating fibroid related
symptoms such as HMB - Complications appear no more likely than after
surgery. - Ovarian failure is very rare in younger women
- The effect on fertility and pregnancy is still
unknown - Should be considered in parous women with heavy
menstrual bleeding particularly if they have
completed their families. - Possibly most appropriate treatment where there
are multiple fibroids
59Acknowledgements
- Dr Jon Moss
- Dr Mona Khaund
- Dr Lillian Murray
- Dr Richard Edwards
- Prof Gordon Murray
- Miss Salma Rashid
- Sister Dorothy Lyons
- Scottish gynaecologists and interventional
radiologists. - Prof Lesley Regan
- Prof Hilary Critchley