Depot goserelin and danazol pre-treatment before rollerball endometrial ablation for menorrhagia
1996; Lippincott Williams & Wilkins; Volume: 87; Issue: 4 Linguagem: Inglês
10.1016/0029-7844(95)00475-0
ISSN1873-233X
AutoresIan S. Fraser, David Healy, Hugh Torode, Jie Song, Pamela Mamers, F Wilde,
Tópico(s)Endometrial and Cervical Cancer Treatments
ResumoTo compare the safety and efficacy of a GnRH agonist, depot goserelin, and danazol as preoperative treatments before rollerball endometrial ablation. We performed an open, randomized study of women with clinically convincing histories of menorrhagia. Two treatment groups of equal size (goserelin acetate, 3.6 mg subcutaneous implant given monthly, n=30; and danazol, 200 mg two times per day, n=30) were treated for 2 months before undergoing endometrial ablation, which entailed using the rollerball with 80–100 watts of coagulating current. Measured menstrual blood loss decreased dramatically after ablation, with 74% of goserelin users and 62% of danazol users achieving complete amenorrhea by the end of the 6-month follow-up period. Among women who did not achieve complete amenorrhea, those in the danazol group were more likely to experience occasional episodes of moderate or heavy bleeding. Mean measured blood loss decreased from 94.8 to 1.1 mL at 3 months and 1.0 ml at 6 months after goserelin, and 97.9 to 15.0 mL and 7.4 mL after danazol. Menstrual pain also improved markedly. The median duration of surgery was 20 minutes (range 5–55) in both groups, median irrigation fluid deficit was 100 mL (range 0–800), and median operative blood loss was 20 mL (range 1–50). Endometrium was less than 2 mm thick in all goserelin and most danazol users. Side effects of goserelin and danazol therapy were all within the expected pattern for these drugs. Depot goserelin and danazol both provide adequate endometrial preparation before rollerball endometrial ablation for treatment of menorrhagia due to ovulatory dysfunctional uterine bleeding.
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