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Long-Term Risk of Reintervention After Surgical Leiomyoma Treatment in an Integrated Health Care System.

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  • Additional Information
    • Publisher Information:
      eScholarship, University of California 2024-05-01
    • Abstract:
      OBJECTIVE: To compare long-term risk of reintervention across four uterus-preserving surgical treatments for leiomyomas and to assess effect modification by sociodemographic factors in a prospective cohort study in an integrated health care delivery system. METHODS: We studied a cohort of 10,324 patients aged 18-50 (19.9% Asian, 21.2% Black, 21.3% Hispanic, 32.5% White, 5.2% additional races and ethnicities) who had a first uterus-preserving procedure (abdominal, laparoscopic, or vaginal myomectomy [referred to as myomectomy]; hysteroscopic myomectomy; endometrial ablation; uterine artery embolization) after leiomyoma diagnosis in the 2009-2021 electronic health records of Kaiser Permanente Northern California. We followed up patients until reintervention (second uterus-preserving procedure or hysterectomy) or censoring. We used a Kaplan-Meier estimator to calculate the cumulative incidence of reintervention and Cox regression models to estimate hazard ratios and 95% CIs comparing rates of reintervention across procedures, adjusting for age, parity, race and ethnicity, body mass index (BMI), Neighborhood Deprivation Index, and year. We also assessed effect modification by demographic characteristics. RESULTS: Median follow-up was 3.8 years (interquartile range 1.8-7.4 years). Index procedures were 18.0% (1,857) hysteroscopic myomectomies, 16.2% (1,669) uterine artery embolizations, 21.4% (2,211) endometrial ablations, and 44.4% (4,587) myomectomies. Accounting for censoring, the 7-year reintervention risk was 20.6% for myomectomy, 26.0% for uterine artery embolization, 35.5% for endometrial ablation, and 37.0% for hysteroscopic myomectomy; 63.2% of reinterventions were hysterectomies. Within each procedure type, reintervention rates did not vary by BMI, race and ethnicity, or Neighborhood Deprivation Index. However, rates of reintervention after uterine artery embolization, endometrial ablation, and hysteroscopic myomectomy decreased with age, and reintervention rat
    • Subject Terms:
    • Availability:
      Open access content. Open access content
      public
    • Note:
      application/pdf
      Obstetrics and Gynecology vol 143, iss 5
    • Other Numbers:
      CDLER oai:escholarship.org:ark:/13030/qt7qc3d3sc
      qt7qc3d3sc
      https://escholarship.org/uc/item/7qc3d3sc
      https://escholarship.org/
      1432079638
    • Contributing Source:
      UC MASS DIGITIZATION
      From OAIster®, provided by the OCLC Cooperative.
    • Accession Number:
      edsoai.on1432079638
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