Clinical Trial: Diagnostic Accuracy of Ultrasound for Adenomyosis, Development of Scoring System and Correlation With Various Pelvic Pathologies: a Prospective Study.

Study Status: Not yet recruiting
Recruit Status: Not yet recruiting
Study Type: Observational




Official Title: Diagnostic Accuracy of Ultrasound for Adenomyosis, Development of Scoring System and Correlation With Various Pelvic Pathologies: a Prospective Study.

Brief Summary:

The association between adenomyosis, ART outcomes and pregnancy complications is well established.

Adenomyosis uteri is a common gynecologic disorder with unclear etiology, characterized by the presence of hetero- topic endometrial glands and stroma in the myometrium with adjacent smooth muscle hyperplasia, defined histopathologically. Uterine adenomyosis is relatively frequent, and the diagnosis is more often made in multiparous patients in their fourth and fifth decade of life.(1) It has been noted in 20% to 30% of the general female population and in up to 70% of hysterectomy specimens, depending on the definition used. (2), (3) Accurate diagnosis and localization of the disease is important, in particular when fertility conservation is warranted. Management options include medical therapy and surgery. Medical therapies target symptomatic relief and include oral contraceptive agents, progestin therapy including the levonorgestrel-releasing intrauterine system, danazol, gonadotropin-releasing hormone agonists, and aromatase inhibitors (4-6). More uterine sparing surgical options are investigated for treatment of adenomyoisis. (7,8) Surgical management can be divided into uterine sparing options such as hysteroscopic or laparoscopic resection of focal disease, endometrial ablation, uterine artery embolization, and MRgFUS, or definitive treatment via hysterectomy. (9-14) The sensitivity and specificity of MRI in diagnosing adenomyosis range from 88% to 93% and 67% to 91%, respectively. (15) Ultrasound has limitation especially when myomas are associated with adenomyosis in 36% to 50% of cases, making MRI an ideal imaging method in that scenario. (16)(2)(17) The sensitivity of ultrasound to detect adenomyosis ranges from 65% to 81%, and specificity ranges from 65% to 100%. (15,17)(18) A recent meta-analysis on the accuracy of ultrasound in the diagnosis of adenomyosis demo