Feasibility of Resectoscopic Operative Hysteroscopy in a UK Outpatient Clinic Using Local Anesthetic and Traditional Reusable Equipment, With Patient Experiences and Comparative Cost Analysis

Abstract Study Objective To assess procedural success, patient acceptability, and cost-saving potential of operative hysteroscopy using conventional equipment and local anesthetic in an outpatient clinic. Design Feasibility study/service evaluation (Canadian Task Force classification II-3). Setting...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of minimally invasive gynecology 2014-09, Vol.21 (5), p.830-836
Hauptverfasser: Penketh, Richard J.A., MD, FRCOG, Bruen, Elizabeth M., RN, NH, White, Judith, PhD, Griffiths, Anthony N., MRCOG, Patwardhan, Asmita, FRCOG, MD, Lindsay, Peter, FRCOG, Hill, Sarah, RGN, Carolan-Rees, Grace, PhD, CSci
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Abstract Study Objective To assess procedural success, patient acceptability, and cost-saving potential of operative hysteroscopy using conventional equipment and local anesthetic in an outpatient clinic. Design Feasibility study/service evaluation (Canadian Task Force classification II-3). Setting Outpatient (office) clinic in a large UK teaching hospital. Patients One hundred eighteen women with diagnosed or suspected intrauterine myomas or polyps. Interventions Operative hysteroscopy (122 monopolar resection procedures using 8- or 10-mm diameter rigid resectoscopes with glycine solution for uterine irrigation) with the patient under local anesthesia in an outpatient (office) clinic. Measurements and Main Results Procedural success, duration of procedure, pathologic measurements, glycine irrigant deficit, patient pain scores and satisfaction, and comparative costs were recorded. Success of outpatient procedures was 90% (110 of 122 attempted), with a significantly reduced median procedure duration compared with a surgical setting using local (–7 minutes; p = .009) or general (−12.5 minutes; p < .001) anesthetic. Glycine irrigant absorption was low (median deficit, 0 mL), and no deficit was observed in 81% of patients. Mean (SD) estimated disease volume was comparable to that of hysteroscopic resection procedures in a surgical setting (3.38 [5.09] cm3 ), and weight was 1.8 (1.84) g. Patients tolerated the procedure well and reported low pain scores (highest median periprocedure pain measurement was 1.25 of 10), and 7-day follow-up satisfaction responses were positive. Retrospective cost analysis demonstrated that operative resection in an outpatient clinic was less expensive than in a surgical setting using general anesthetic (−$1003) or local anaesthetic (−$234). Reduced staff costs were the primary reason for this saving. Conclusions Operative hysteroscopic resection of myomas and polyps is feasible and well tolerated by patients in an outpatient/office setting using local anaesthetic and conventional equipment. The outpatient procedure is less expensive and its duration is shorter than in a surgical setting.
ISSN:1553-4650
1553-4669
DOI:10.1016/j.jmig.2014.03.013