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Clinical Trial
. 1997 Apr;76(4):340-4.
doi: 10.1111/j.1600-0412.1997.tb07989.x.

Pre- and postoperative therapy with GnRH agonist for endometrial resection. A prospective, randomized study

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Free article
Clinical Trial

Pre- and postoperative therapy with GnRH agonist for endometrial resection. A prospective, randomized study

S S Sørensen et al. Acta Obstet Gynecol Scand. 1997 Apr.
Free article

Abstract

Background: To assess the value of endometrial preparation, with preoperative and pre- and postoperative GnRH agonist therapy in transcervical endometrial resection.

Methods: Sixty women with menorrhagia were randomly divided between three groups: A: no preoperative preparation, B: goserelin 3.6 mg given as a subcutaneous implant 4-6 weeks preoperatively, and C: the same regimen as B, and repeated on the day of endometrial resection. At follow-up visits 1, 3, 6 and 12 months after operations the patients were interviewed for duration, amount and pains of menstrual periods.

Results: The duration of surgery for the pretreated group (32.8 +/- 5.1 min) and the group treated postoperatively (30.9 +/- 8.9 min) were significantly shorter than that in the control group (46.4 +/- 11.5 min) (p < 0.01). The weight of endomyometrial strips was about 3 times lower for group B and C as compared to group A (p < 0.01). Three months following the procedure twenty five percent of patients in group A were amenorrheic or showed scanty bleeding as compared to 58% and 85% in group B and C (p < 0.05 and p < 0.01), respectively. At 12 months follow-up these rates were 35%, 58% and 67% respectively (A versus B: NS, A versus C: p < 0.05) and 24%, 65% and 75% after excluding larger submucosal fibroids (A versus B: p < 0.025, A versus C: p < 0.005). No statistical difference was demonstrated between group B and C. Sixty-nine percent of pretreated patients (group B + C) versus 35% of women in group A reported improved or relieved menstrual cramps (p < 0.05).

Conclusions: GnRH pretreatment facilitates endometrial resection and increases the rate of amenorrhea and scanty bleeding postoperatively. Whether supplementary postoperative therapy with GnRH agonist enhances the success rate further is uncertain.

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