PLoS Medicine (Dec 2023)

Procedural sedation and analgesia versus general anesthesia for hysteroscopic myomectomy (PROSECCO trial): A multicenter randomized controlled trial.

  • Julia F van der Meulen,
  • Marlies Y Bongers,
  • Lisa G van der Zee,
  • Jaklien C Leemans,
  • Ruben G Duijnhoven,
  • Robert A de Leeuw,
  • Lucilla E Overdijk,
  • Celine M Radder,
  • Lucet F van der Voet,
  • Nicol A C Smeets,
  • Huib A A M van Vliet,
  • Wouter J K Hehenkamp,
  • Arentje P Manger,
  • Arianne C Lim,
  • Louisette W Peters,
  • Nicole Horree,
  • Justine M Briët,
  • Jan Willem van der Steeg,
  • Sjors F P J Coppus,
  • Helen S Kok

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pmed.1004323
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 20, no. 12
p. e1004323

Abstract

Read online

BackgroundHysteroscopic resection is the first-choice treatment for symptomatic type 0 and 1 fibroids. Traditionally, this was performed under general anesthesia. Over the last decade, surgical procedures are increasingly being performed in an outpatient setting under procedural sedation and analgesia. However, studies evaluating safety and effectiveness of hysteroscopic myomectomy under procedural sedation are lacking. This study aims to investigate whether hysteroscopic myomectomy under procedural sedation and analgesia with propofol is noninferior to hysteroscopic myomectomy under general anesthesia.Methods and findingsThis was a multicenter, randomized controlled noninferiority trial conducted in 14 university and teaching hospitals in the Netherlands between 2016 and 2021. Inclusion criteria were age ≥18 years, maximum number of 3 type 0 or 1 fibroids, maximum fibroid diameter 3.5 cm, American Society of Anesthesiologists class 1 or 2, and having sufficient knowledge of the Dutch or English language. Women with clotting disorders or with severe anemia (Hb ConclusionsNoninferiority of PSA for completeness of resection was not shown, though there were no significant differences in clinical outcomes and quality of life. In this study, hysteroscopic myomectomy for type 0 and 1 fibroids with PSA compared to GA was safe and led to shorter hospitalization. These results can be used for counseling patients by gynecologists and anesthesiologists. Based on these findings, we suggest that hysteroscopic myomectomies can be performed under PSA in an outpatient setting.Trial registrationThe study was registered prospectively in the Dutch Trial Register (NTR 5357; registration date: 11 August 2015; Date of initial participant enrollment: 18 February 2016).