Neuropelveology for Endometriosis Management: A Systematic Review and Multilevel Meta-Analysis
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Search Strategy and Information Sources
2.2. Study Selection
2.3. Outcomes
2.4. Data Synthesis and Extraction
2.5. Assessment of Risk of Bias in Individual Studies
- (a)
- The Cochrane Risk of Bias Tool (RoB 2) for randomized controlled trials does not have specific predefined cutoffs but rather assesses the risk of bias in various domains of a study. For each domain, the RoB provides options to assign a judgment of “low risk”, “high risk”, or “unclear risk” of bias [18].
- (b)
- The methodological index for non-randomized studies (MINORS) tool includes twelve questions and divides articles into two qualitative ranks (low and high risk of bias) [19].
- (c)
- The Newcastle–Ottawa Scale (NOS) for cohort studies was used. The quality of each study was rated using the following scoring algorithms: ≥7 points were considered as “good”, 2 to 6 points were considered as “fair”, and ≤1 point was considered as “poor” quality [20].
- (d)
- The National Institutes of Health’s (NIH) quality assessment tool for case series studies, last updated in July 2021, consists of nine questions and assigns three quality ratings (good, fair, and poor) [21].
2.6. Data Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Search Results
3.2. Synthesis of Results
- (a)
- Efficacy of neurectomy or nerve resection in the management of endometriosis:
- (b)
- Efficacy of neurolysis (nerve blocks) in the management of endometriosis:
- (c)
- Efficacy of neuromodulation in the management of endometriosis
4. Discussion
5. Limitations
6. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Characteristics | References | |
---|---|---|
Study type | Observational studies | [27,32,33,34,35,36,37,38,42,47,48,51,54,55,57] |
Experimental studies | [35,41,43,44,53,58] | |
Producers | CS and PSN vs. only CS | [32,33,35,41,42,43,44,57] |
CS and UNA vs. only CS | [53,58] | |
CS and PSN | [34,36,37,38,47,48,51,54] | |
Large resection of the sciatic nerve (>30% of the nerve) | [27,55] | |
Follow-up duration | 6 months | [35,42,58] |
12 months | [27,41,43,47,53,54] | |
>12 months | [32,33,34,37,38,48,51,55,57] |
Study, Date, and Location | Participants | Sample Size (n) | Age | Neurosurgical Approach | Design | Technique | Variable | Questionnaire(s) | Duration of Follow-Up | Outcomes | Complications | Risk of Bias |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Dailey et al., 1952, the USA [32] | Women with pelvic endometriosis | 74 (CS + PSN, 30; only CS, 44) | 18–33 | CS + PSN vs. only CS | Retrospective | NA | Pain and fertility | NA | 7 months to 60 months | CS + PSN vs. only CS: Complete pain relief: 80% vs. 45.5%. Partial pain relief: 16.7% vs. 31.8%. None: 3.3% vs. 22.7%. There was no effect of fertility. | Bladder impairment (n = 0) and failure in PSN (n = 1). | Fair |
García and David 1977, the USA [33] | Women with endometriosis and infertility | 71 (CS + PSN, 35; only CS, 36) | 28.9 | CS + PSN vs. only CS | Retrospective | Laparotomy | Dysmenourae, dysparunia, and pregnancy, occurance | NA | 24 months | CS + PSN vs. only CS: Improved dysmenorrhea: 97.1% vs. 72.2%. Improved dyspareunia: 74.3% vs. 58.3%. Less impressive association of presacral neurectomy with pregnancy. | NA | Fair |
Polan and DeCherney, 1980, the USA [34] | Women with endometriosis | CS + PSN (n = 8) | NA | CS + PSN | Retrospective | Laparotomy/laparascopy | Pain, pregnancy rate | NA | 6 months to 84 months | 75% of patients were pain-free. Pregnancy rate: 47%. | NA * | Fair |
Tjaden et al., 1991a, the USA [35] | Women with endometriosis, stage III or IV | 8 (CS + PSN, 4; only CS, 4) | 31 | CS + PSN vs. only CS | Randomized controlled study | NA | Dysmenourae and dysparonia | NA | 6 months | CS + PSN vs. only CS: 100% vs. 0% had improved dysmenorrhea. | NA | High risk |
Tjaden et al., 1991b, the USA [35] | Women with endometriosis, stage III or IV | 18(CS + PSN, 13; only CS, 5) | 31 | CS + PSN vs. only CS | Non-randomized controlled study | NA | Dysmenourae and dysparonia | NA | 6 months | CS + PSN vs. only CS: 85% vs. 0% had improved dysmenorrhea. There was a decrease in persistent back pain in the PSN group, but there was no improvement in lateral pain or dyspareunia. | NA | High risk |
Candiani et al., 1992, Italy [41] | Moderate or severe endometriosis and midline dysmenorrhea | 71 (CS + PSN, 35; only CS, 36) | 32.5 (4.2) in the CS + PSN group; 31.1 (+3.6) in CS | CS + PSN vs. only CS | Randomized controlled study | Laparotomy or laparoscopy | Dysmenorrhea, pelvic pain, and deep dyspareunia intermenstrual pain | 10-point VAS | 12 months | CS + PSN vs. only CS: Moderate or severe dysmenorrhea was 80% vs. 75%. Deep dyspareunia and pelvic pain improved in 78.94% and 82.3% of patients compared with 77.8% and 80% of women who underwent CS. | Second laparotomy 2 days after presacral neurectomy for a retroperitoneal presacral hematoma (n = 1), constipation developed or worsened (n = 13), and urinary urgency (n = 3). | High risk |
Nezhat and Nezhat, 1992, the USA [36] | Women with endometriosis | 52 | 18–45 years | CS + PSN | Observational study | Laparoscopy | Pelvic pain and dysmenorrhoea | NA | Overall pain relief was reported by 49 (94%) of 52 patients. Dysmenorrhoea was reduced in 48 patients (92%). | NA | Fair | |
Perry and Perez, 1993, the USA [37] | Women with endometriosis | 72 | 27.8 (6.1) | CS + PSN | Prospective consecutive cohort | Laparascopy | Pelvic pain sexual function | 10-point VAS | 24 months | Reduction in pain was reported in 91% of the patients. The preoperative pain score decreased from 7.9 ± 1.7 to 2.1 ± 1.4 at the end of 24 months. Sexual function was unaffected or improved. | Second laparotomy due to surgical complications (n = 1) for the control of bleeding. Vaginal dryness (n = 2), and constipation (n = 1). | Fair |
Zullo et al., 1996, Italy [42] | Women with endometriosis | 40 (CS + PSN, 16; CS + USR, 24) | 29.3 (3.9) in CS + PSN vs. 31.2 (4.2) | CS + PSN vs. CS + USR | Retrospective study | Laparoscopy | Dysmenorrhea, deep dyspareunia, and pelvic pain | 10-point VAS | 6 months | CS + PSN could reduce the score of dysmenorrhea, dyspareunia, and pelvic pain to 4.5 ± 1.5, 4 ± 1, and 4.81 ± 1.88, respectively. CS + USR could reduce the score of dysmenorrhea, dyspareunia, and pelvic pain to 2.4 ± 1.59, 5.11 ± 2.23, and 4.7 ± 1.33, respectively. The efficacy of PSN in reducing pain was significantly higher than USR. | Major bleeding (>500 mL) from midsacral vessels, constipation (n = 5), and urinary urgency (n = 2). | Fair |
Chen and Soong, 1997, Taiwan [47] | Women with endometriosis | 335 | 30.9 (6.4) | CS + PSN | Retrospective study | Laparoscopy | Pain | 5-point VAS | 12 months | A total of 59% of the patients reported significant pain relief (no pain or mild pain requiring no medication). | NA * | Fair |
Nezhat et al., 1998, the USA [38] | Women with pelvic pain attributed to endometriosis | 176 | Median age, 30 (18–45) | CS + PSN | A prospective postoperative follow-up | Laparascopy | Pelvic pain, dysmenorrhea, and dyspareunia | 4-point scale (no, <50%, 50–80%, or >80% reduction) | 12–72 months | Pelvic pain, dysmenorrhea, and dyspareunia were reportedly significantly reduced in 74%, 61%, and 55% of the patients, respectively. | NA | Fair |
Kwok et al., 2001, Australia [51] | Women with endometriosis | 9 | 28.2 | CS + PSN | A retrospective case series | Laparascopy | Pain | 4-point VAS | 14.6 months (2–32 months) | A total of 77.8% of the patients reported significant improvement of symptoms. A total of 11.1% of the patients experienced mild improvement, while 11.1% failed to show any improvement in symptoms. | Mild loss of bladder filling sensation (n = 1) and constipation (n = 1), which lasted two weeks in one patient. | Poor |
Sutton et al., 2001, the UK [58] | Women with pelvic pain and pelvic endometriosis | 51 (laser vaporization + LUNA, 27; only laser vaporization, 24) | 28 years (range, 20–41) | Laser vaporization + LUNA vs. laser vaporization | A prospective randomized double-blind controlled trial | Laparascopy | Dysmenorrhoea, dyspareunia, and chronic non-menstrual pelvic pain | 10-point VAS | 6 months | Significant differences in favour of the non-LUNA group for dysmenorrhea and non-menstrual pain. There were no significant differences recorded for dyspareunia. | NA | High risk |
Zullo et al., 2003, Italy [43] | Women with dysmenorrhea due to endometriosis | 126 (CS + PSN, 63; only CS, 63) | 30.3 (3.7) in CS+ PSN vs. 31.9 (4.9) in CS only | CS + PSN vs. only CS | Randomized controlled trial | Laparoscopy | Dysmenorrhea, dyspareunia, chronic pelvic pain, and quality of life | 100 mm VAS | 12 months | Cure rate was significantly higher in CS + PSN group (85.6%) than in CS group (57%). Severity was significantly lower in CS + PSN group than CS group. | NA | High risk |
Johnson, 2004, New Zealand [53] | Chronic pelvic pain in women with endometriosis | 67 (CS + PSN, 32; only CS, 35) | NA | CS + LUNA vs. only CS | A prospective, double-blind randomized controlled trial | Laparascopy | Non-menstrual pelvic pain, dysmenorrhoea, deep dyspareunia, and dyschezia | 10-point VAS | 12 months | There was no significant difference in non-menstrual pelvic pain, deep dyspareunia, or dyschezia in women with no endometriosis undergoing LUNA versus no LUNA. The addition of LUNA to the laparoscopic surgical treatment of endometriosis was not associated with a significant difference in any pain outcomes. | NA | Low risk |
Zullo et al., 2004, Italy [44] | Women with dysmenorrhea due to endometriosis | 120 (CS + PSN, 60; only CS, 60) | 31.9 ± 4.9 in CS+ PSN vs. 30.3 ± 3.7 in CS | CS + PSN vs. only CS | Randomized controlled trial | Laparascopy | Cure rates; frequency and severity of dysmenorrhea, dyspareunia, and chronic pelvic pain; and quality of life | Quality of life assessment (SF-36) | 24 months | Cure rate was significantly higher in the CS + PSN group (83.3%) than in the CS group (53.3%). Severity was significantly lower in the CS + PSN group than the CS group. A significant improvement in quality of life was observed in the CS + PSN group compared with the CS group. | Constipation (n = 9), urinary urgency (n = 3), and both constipation and urinary urgency (n = 1). | Some concerns |
Chang et al., 2007, Taiwan [48] | Women with dysmenorrhea due to endometriosis | 88 (CS + LPSN, 33; CS + MLPSN, 55) | 31.03 (5.9) in CS + LPSN vs. 31.16 (6.23) in CS+ MLPSN | CS+ LPSN vs. CS+ MLPSN | Non-randomized prospective study | Laparoscopy | Dysmenorrhea | 5-point scale | 96 months | Both groups demonstrated a significant decrease in the mean pain score when compared to the pre-surgery mean pain scores from 3.04 (1.04) to 1.04 (0.86) and from 2.91 (0.83) to 0.48 (0.46). Additionally, the eight-year probability of recurrence was higher in the LPSN group (81.8%, 27 patients) compared to the MLPSN group (43.6%, 24 patients). | The minimal peri-postoperative blood loss (n = 1), infections (n = 5), and constipation (n = 1). | Low risk |
Jedrzejczak et al., 2009, Poland [54] | Women with endometriosis | 16 | 30.3 (7.9); range, 21–46 | CS + PSN | Cohort | Laparoscopy | Dysmenorrhoea and pelvic pain | VAS | 12 months | At 12 months, dysmenorrhea increased. Pelvic pain not related to menses decreased by 67%. Dyspareunia declined dramatically at 3 and 12 months to a median score of 0. | NA | Poor |
Liu et al., 2011, China [57] | Women with endometrisos | 59 (CS + PSN, 28; only CS, 31 | NA | CS + PSN vs. only CS | Non-randomized prospective study | Laparoscopy | Pain relief | NA | 12.8 months (6 to 18 months | The post-operative pain relief rate was 89.28% (25/28) in the LPN group and 61.29% (19/31) in a control group. | NA | High risk |
Possover, 2017, Switzerland [55] | Women with DIE | 46 | 28 years (range, 24–36) | CS + a large resection of the sciatic nerve (>30% of the nerve) | Prospective clinical case series | Laparoscopy | Pelvic pain | 10-point VAS | 60 months | Pain was reduced from 9.33 preoperatively to an average 1.25 at a 3-year follow-up. | No perioperative or postoperative major occurred. | Fair |
Roman et al., 2021, France and Denmark [27] | Women with DIE | 52 | NA | CS + decompression or a large resection of the sciatic nerve | Retrospective case series | Laparoscopy | Quality of life | Short-form 36 questionnaire | 12 months | There was a significant improvement in the quality of life. | Bladder impairment (n = 14), hypoesthesia, hyperesthesia, or allodynia (n = 9). | Fair |
Characteristics | Reference | |
---|---|---|
Study type | Observational study | [39,49,50] |
Open-label pilot clinical trial | [52] | |
Producers | Superior hypogastric plexus block | [39,49,52] |
Uterine nerve ethanol neurolysis + CS vs. only CS | [50] | |
Agent | Diatnizoate meglumine + bupivacaine hydrochloride | [39] |
Phenol | [49] | |
Ethanol | [50] | |
Bupivacaine + triamcinolone | [52] | |
Follow-up duration | 6 months | [50,52] |
12 months | [49] | |
NA | [39] |
Study, Date, and Country | Participants | Sample Size (n) | Age | Neurosurgical Approach | Design | Agent | Variable | Instrument | Duration of Follow-Up | Outcomes | Complications | Quality of Article |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Wechsler et al., 1995, the USA [39] | Women with endometriosis and pelvic pain | 5 | 28–31 years (mean, 31.6 years) | Superior hypogastric plexus block | Retrospective case series | A total of 1 mL of diatnizoate meglumine mixed with 6–8 mL of 0.25 bupivacaine hydrochloride | Pain | 10-point VAS | NA | A total of 20% (1/5) of the patients experienced mild pain relief. A total of 60% (3/5) of the patients reported considerable pain relief. A total of 20% (1/5) of the patients achieved complete pain relief. | Abdominal pain (n = 1). | Fair |
Soysal et al., 2003, Turkey [49] | Women with endometrisos | 15 | 33.4 (1.9) | Superior hypogastric plexus block | Prospective observational study | A total of 10 mL of phenol | Pelvic symptom resolution, non-opioid analgesic consumption during menses, and sexual performance | 3-point VAS and SSRS | 12 months | A significant reduction was observed in the total pelvic symptom score, decreasing from 9.04 (1.2) pre-operatively to 2.2 (0.8) at the 12th postoperative month. SSRS increased from 30.9 (2.3) to 64.2 (2.8). Analgesic consumption during menses (ACDM) decreased from 8.9 (1.1) to 2.6 (0.8). | Retention of the urine (n = 1) and constipation (n = 11). | Fair |
Sönmez et al., 2016, Turkey [50] | Women with pelvic pain | 29 (9, endometriosis; 20, control group) | NA | Uterine nerve ethanol neurolysis + CS vs. only CS | Cohort | A total of 5 mL of 50% ethanol | Pain | 10-point VAS | 6 months | Preoperative VAS scores in the LUNEN group decreased from 7.59 ± 1.29 to 3.18 ± 2.88, postoperatively. In the control group, the VAS scores decreased from 7.90 ± 1.58 to 5.35 ± 3.09, postoperatively. | No problem. | Fair |
Khodaverdi et al., 2021, Iran [52] | Women with endometriosis | 16 | 33 ± 5.5, ranging from 26 to 39 years | Superior hypogastric plexus block | Open-label pilot clinical trial | A total of 10 mL of bupivacaine (0.25%), along with 40 mg of triamcinolone | Chronic pelvic pain, dysmenorrhoea, dyspareunia, and quality of life | 10-point VAS and short form of EHP-5 | 6 months | The mean VAS score for dysmenorrhea improved significantly from 8.6 to 2.2. The mean VAS score for dyspareunia improved significantly from 7.8 to 1. The mean VAS score for chronic pelvic pain (CPP) improved significantly from 8.1 to 3. The mean overall baseline EHP-5 score was 54.3 ± 18.2 before the intervention and 24.6 ± 13.3 after the intervention. | Bruising of the injection site (n = 2). | Low risk |
Characteristics | References | |
---|---|---|
Study type | Randomized, crossover, pilot study | [40,45,46] |
Observational study | [9,26,56] | |
Producers | RAVANS vs. NVAS | [40] |
SNM | [26,45,46,56] | |
The lumbar or sacral nerve | [9] | |
Follow-up duration | 15 min | [40] |
6–8 weeks | [26] | |
12 months | [46] | |
>12 months | [9,45,56] |
Study, Date, and Location | Participants | Sample Size (n) | Age | Neurosurgical Approach | Design | Variable | Instrument | Duration of Follow-Up | Outcomes | Complications | Quality of Article |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Napadow et al., 2012, the USA [40] | Women with endometriosis | 15 | 36.3 years old (10.6), range = 20–58 years) | RAVANS vs. NVAS | Randomized, crossover, pilot study | Deep tissue pain intensity, temporal summation of pain, and anxiety ratings | VAS—100 mm | 15 min after stimulus cessation | RAVANS reduced the evoked pain intensity, temporal summation of mechanical pain, and anxiety compared to NVAS. | NA | Some concern |
Nyangoh Timoh et al. 2015, France [56] | Women with endometriosis | 5 | 34.4 years (SD: 4.7) | SNM | Retrospective study | Persistent voiding dysfunction | Electrophysiological and urodynamic tests | 52 months | A total of 40% of the patients had a positive SNM test and underwent permanent implantation. | No complications | Fair |
Lavonius et al., 2017, Finland [45] | Women with endometriosis | 4 | 42.5 | SNM | A pilot study | Symptom improvement and women’s subjective satisfaction | 5- and 10-point VAS | 30 months | A total of 75% of the patients reported a better quality of life and expressed a desire to continue with SNM. | NA | Fair |
Kolodziej et al., 2019, Germany [9] | Women with endometriosis | 6 | Median age was 36.5 years | The lumbar or sacral nerve roots stimulated by an implantation of the electrode | Case series | Pain intensity, generic health status, and client satisfaction | 10-point NRS, EQ-5D-5L PCS, and CSQ-8 | 7–60 months | The NRS improved from a median of 9.5, preoperatively, to 3.0. The median EQ-5D-5L index value before treatment was 0.18, indicating a notably lowered quality of life, and increased up to 0.83 after six months. Preoperative PCS was elevated with a median score of 41.0 and decreased to 4.0 after six months. CSQ showed that patients were satisfied with the treatment. | Infection (n = 1) | Fair |
Agnello et al., 2021, Italy [26] | Women with endometriosis | 13 | NA | SNM | Retrospective study | Voiding symptoms | UDSs | 6–8 weeks | A total of 69.2% of the patients experienced a significant improvement of symptoms that led to definitive implants. A total of 30.8% of the patients had no symptom relief, and the system was removed. | NA | Fair |
Zegrea et al., 2023, Finland [46] | Women with endometriosis | 31 patients | 36 (19–59) years | Two stages of SNM | Multicenter prospective pilot | Postoperative pain and quality of life | BPI (0–10 points), CGI-I (0–7 points), 15D-measure of health-related quality of life (0–1 point), and B&B score (0–9 points) | 12 months | Daily pain decreased from a median of 9 to 5. There was a statistically significant change in the overall 15D score. The median B&B score also improved significantly, decreasing from a baseline value of 8 to 4.5. | Stage 1: infection (n = 1) and pain (n = 2). Stage 2: infection (n = 5) and pain (n = 1). | Fair |
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Allahqoli, L.; Hakimi, S.; Momenimovahed, Z.; Mazidimoradi, A.; Rezaei, F.; Aghamohammadi, S.Z.; Rahmani, A.; Mansouri, G.; Hadavandsiri, F.; Salehiniya, H.; et al. Neuropelveology for Endometriosis Management: A Systematic Review and Multilevel Meta-Analysis. J. Clin. Med. 2024, 13, 4676. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm13164676
Allahqoli L, Hakimi S, Momenimovahed Z, Mazidimoradi A, Rezaei F, Aghamohammadi SZ, Rahmani A, Mansouri G, Hadavandsiri F, Salehiniya H, et al. Neuropelveology for Endometriosis Management: A Systematic Review and Multilevel Meta-Analysis. Journal of Clinical Medicine. 2024; 13(16):4676. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm13164676
Chicago/Turabian StyleAllahqoli, Leila, Sevil Hakimi, Zohre Momenimovahed, Afrooz Mazidimoradi, Fatemeh Rezaei, Seyedeh Zahra Aghamohammadi, Azam Rahmani, Ghazal Mansouri, Fatemeh Hadavandsiri, Hamid Salehiniya, and et al. 2024. "Neuropelveology for Endometriosis Management: A Systematic Review and Multilevel Meta-Analysis" Journal of Clinical Medicine 13, no. 16: 4676. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm13164676
APA StyleAllahqoli, L., Hakimi, S., Momenimovahed, Z., Mazidimoradi, A., Rezaei, F., Aghamohammadi, S. Z., Rahmani, A., Mansouri, G., Hadavandsiri, F., Salehiniya, H., & Alkatout, I. (2024). Neuropelveology for Endometriosis Management: A Systematic Review and Multilevel Meta-Analysis. Journal of Clinical Medicine, 13(16), 4676. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm13164676