BMC Medicine (Aug 2024)

Predicting disease recurrence in patients with endometriosis: an observational study

  • Sarah J. Holdsworth-Carson,
  • Jessica Chung,
  • Dorothy A. Machalek,
  • Rebecca Li,
  • Byung Kyu Jun,
  • Meaghan J. Griffiths,
  • Molly Churchill,
  • Tristan McCaughey,
  • Debbie Nisbet,
  • Uri Dior,
  • Jacqueline F. Donoghue,
  • Grant W. Montgomery,
  • Charlotte Reddington,
  • Jane E. Girling,
  • Martin Healey,
  • Peter A. W. Rogers

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12916-024-03508-7
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 22, no. 1
pp. 1 – 35

Abstract

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Abstract Background Despite surgical and pharmacological interventions, endometriosis can recur. Reliable information regarding risk of recurrence following a first diagnosis is scant. The aim of this study was to examine clinical and survey data in the setting of disease recurrence to identify predictors of risk of endometriosis recurrence. Methods This observational study reviewed data from 794 patients having surgery for pelvic pain or endometriosis. Patients were stratified into two analytic groups based on self-reported or surgically confirmed recurrent endometriosis. Statistical analyses included univariate, followed by multivariate logistic regression to identify risk factors of recurrence, with least absolute shrinkage and selection operator (Lasso) regularisation. Risk-calibrated Supersparse Linear Integer Models (RiskSLIM) and survival analyses (with Lasso) were undertaken to identify predictive features of recurrence. Results Several significant features were repeatedly identified in association with recurrence, including adhesions, high rASRM score, deep disease, bowel lesions, adenomyosis, emergency room attendance for pelvic pain, younger age at menarche, higher gravidity, high blood pressure and older age. In the surgically confirmed group, with a score of 5, the RiskSLIM method was able to predict the risk of recurrence (compared to a single diagnosis) at 95.3% and included adenomyosis and adhesions in the model. Survival analysis further highlighted bowel lesions, adhesions and adenomyosis. Conclusions Following an initial diagnosis of endometriosis, clinical decision-making regarding disease management should take into consideration the presence of bowel lesions, adhesions and adenomyosis, which increase the risk of endometriosis recurrence.

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