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RecruitingNCT07313345

Predicting the Pain Outcome of Surgery for Endometriosis

Status
Recruiting
Phase
Study type
Observational
Enrollment
100 (estimated)
Sponsor
University of Oxford · Academic / Other
Sex
Female
Age
18 Years – 50 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

This study aims to determine whether the investigators can predict who will get benefit in terms of their pain from surgery for more severe forms of endometriosis. The investigators will use brain imaging to explore this, as it allows meaningful results from a smaller sample of people than if questionnaires alone were relied on.

Detailed description

Endometriosis is a chronic gynaecological condition that affects around 10% of women of reproductive age. This condition can cause debilitating pain, infertility, and poor quality of life. Endometriosis is a condition where tissue resembling the womb lining is present outside of the womb and is associated with an inflammatory pelvic environment. Symptoms of endometriosis can consist of pain during periods, chronic (non-cyclical) pelvic pain, pain during sex, pain when urinating, pain when defecating, and fatigue. Current treatments for endometriosis consist of hormonal, anti-inflammatory and / or analgesic medications and surgery, which is usually laparoscopic ("key-hole"). However, surgery does not always result in a reduction in pain for patients with endometriosis, therefore, it is important to try and understand which patients are most likely to benefit from surgery for their pain management. Endometriosis is categorized into 4 stages (I - IV), ranging from small areas of tissue that do not extend deeply (stage I) to deep lesions associated with significant scarring of the pelvis and ovarian cysts (endometriomas). Interestingly, symptoms do not correlate with stage of disease. An NIHR funded clinical trial is currently investigating whether surgical treatment of superficial peritoneal endometriosis is of clinical benefit (ESPriT2) and is expected to report early in 2026 (recruitment and baseline data collection are complete). However, women with more severe forms of the disease are excluded from this trial. Surgery is commonly recommended for those with more extensive disease (stages III and IV), however, the risks of surgery are considerably greater for these patients including risk of bladder and bowel damage (sometimes requiring stoma formation) and a negative impact on future fertility. Therefore it is important to better understand who will benefit from this type of surgery. Rather than performing a full clinical trial, the investigators will use a set of experimental tests that allow pain to be understood in more detail meaning less people need to be included in the study and results will be available sooner. In the present study, patients with pelvic endometriosis at stage III or IV with planned surgical treatment scheduled will be recruited to the project. Participants taking part will provide data at 5 different time points: Time point 1 will consist of several baseline questionnaires, an experimental sensory assessment, and a brain functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) scan. Time point 2 will be the date of their endometriosis surgery, where a questionnaire will be taken, the surgery will be completed, and several biological samples (e.g. blood and small amounts of pelvic fluid and tissue) will be taken. Time points 3 (3 months post-surgery), 4 (6 months post-surgery), and 5 (12 months post-surgery) will consist of completing online questionnaires. All data collected within this project will be used to investigate pain outcome following endometriosis surgery. This research is funded by NIHR BRC.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
PROCEDURESurgical treatment of endometriosisThis is an observational study and thus the surgery performed is part of standard clinical care. The procedure will be at the discretion of the operating surgeon/endometriosis multi-disciplinary team and may include bowel resection, stoma formation, ureteric stenting/reimplantation, salpingectomy, oophorectomy or hysterectomy in addition to excision/ablation of endometriosis lesions. Information about the surgical procedure will be collected, but no planned surgical procedure will be an exclusion.

Timeline

Start date
2025-12-01
Primary completion
2028-08-01
Completion
2028-08-01
First posted
2025-12-31
Last updated
2025-12-31

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United Kingdom

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT07313345. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.