1. Gonadotropin-releasing hormone agonist use before hysterectomy.
- Author
-
Stovall TG, Summit RL Jr, Washburn SA, and Ling FW
- Subjects
- Adult, Blood Loss, Surgical, Blood Transfusion, Blood Volume, Combined Modality Therapy, Female, Humans, Hysterectomy, Vaginal, Leiomyoma pathology, Leiomyoma surgery, Length of Stay, Leuprolide pharmacology, Middle Aged, Organ Size drug effects, Uterine Neoplasms pathology, Uterine Neoplasms surgery, Uterus pathology, Hysterectomy, Leiomyoma drug therapy, Leuprolide therapeutic use, Uterine Neoplasms drug therapy
- Abstract
Objective: Our purpose was to compare the effects of leuprolide acetate in patients with symptomatic uterine leiomyoma before hysterectomy., Study Design: Group I (n = 90) included patients with a pretreatment uterine size of 14 to 18 gestational weeks and group II (n = 60) included patients with uteri > 18 weeks' gestational size. Patients in both groups were randomized to either immediate hysterectomy or 2 months of preoperative gonadotropin-releasing hormone agonist., Results: All patients in the two groups with a pretreatment hemoglobin < 11.0 gm/dl randomized to agonist had a significant (p < 0.05) increase (> or = 1.5 gm/dl) in hemoglobin level. Patients in group I who received preoperative agonist were more likely to undergo vaginal hysterectomy (80% vs 13%, p < 0.05) than were patients who did not receive preoperative agonist. Patients undergoing vaginal hysterectomy had a shorter hospital stay, decreased operative blood loss, and a shorter convalescence period than did those undergoing abdominal hysterectomy. In group II, in spite of a mean uterine volume reduction of 51.3%, intraoperative morbidity, operative blood loss, hospital stay, and postoperative convalescence period did not differ between treatment arms., Conclusion: The preoperative administration of gonadotropin-releasing hormone agonist in patients with a uterus of 14 to 18 weeks' size increases the use of vaginal hysterectomy, decreases intraoperative blood loss, and shortens hospital stay and convalescence. Preoperative gonadotropin-releasing hormone agonist for patients with a preoperative hemoglobin < 11.0 gm/dl reduces the risk of preoperative transfusion. Preoperative gonadotropin-releasing hormone use in the nonanemic patient with a uterine size > or = 18 weeks' gestational size doses not appear to lower operative morbidity.
- Published
- 1994