Myolysis or thermoablation of uterine fibroids - Prof. Antonio La Marca
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Myolysis or thermoablation of uterine fibroids

Insight into performance

Myolysis or thermoablation of uterine fibroids

Myolysis or transvaginal ultrasound-guided thermoablation is a technique currently only performed in a few centres. Prof La Marca personally handles the method and receives patients from all over the country to perform this innovative therapy. It is an ultra minimally invasive technique that only requires a hospital stay of a few hours. 

Uterine fibroma is a benign solid tumour that originates at the level of the uterine smooth muscle, with a prevalence rate of up to 70%, representing the most common benign uterine tumour in women during their reproductive years. Fibroids are diagnosed in women of all ages, but are most commonly found in women between the ages of 35 and 50.

Although they are benign and may be asymptomatic, approximately 30% of fibroids cause uterine bleeding that is abnormal in quantity and duration, dysmenorrhoea, pelvic discomfort and pain due to pressure on adjacent organs and structures, as well as obstetrical complications such as infertility, recurrent miscarriage or preterm labour. These symptom pictures can be particularly detrimental to a woman's physical well-being, emotional state, social interactions and quality of life.
 
Due to their prevalence and associated symptomatology, uterine fibroids constitute a significant social and health problem, leading to gynaecological admissions and approximately 80% of all hysterectomies. Therefore, the management of abnormal uterine bleeding and the symptoms listed above is crucial to improving the quality of life of women diagnosed with fibromatosis.
 
Several treatments are available for fibroids and their associated symptoms, ranging from pharmacological medical management to conventional and newer, less invasive surgical options. The choice of an appropriate treatment option takes into account various aspects, such as the size, number and location of fibroids, the presence of symptoms, the patient's age, the desire to preserve fertility, and the individual patient's preferences. 
 
Interest in less invasive fertility-preserving techniques has increased in recent years. Studies are reported in the literature showing that 80% of women prefer less invasive alternatives for the management of fibroids and 50% of them wish to preserve the uterus.
 
Minimally invasive treatments for uterine smooth muscle tumours are designed with the aim of preserving women's fertility but may also represent a promising alternative treatment option for women with a high surgical risk. Such treatments include uterine artery embolisation, focused ultrasound guided by magnetic resonance imaging, radiofrequency or microwave ablation (also known as interstitial myolysis).
 
Myolysis with radiofrequency or microwaves refers to the ablation of uterine fibroids using focused energy with electric current through an electrode, with radiofrequency or microwaves used as the energy source. It is a procedure involving thermal ablation aimed at coagulating the fibroid tissues instead of removing them completely.
 
The mechanism by which radio frequency or microwave heats tissue is through resistive heating of a narrow flap of tissue in direct contact with the electrode. Deeper tissue planes are then heated by conduction from the small volume heating region. The heat is dissipated from the region by further thermal conduction into the normothermic tissue. It is a technique that is already used in other medical fields, such as in the treatment of lung, kidney or liver cancer, so it is a procedure with a large case history.
 
Myolysis was first used laparoscopically and then hysteroscopically or transvaginally under ultrasound guidance. Transvaginally ultrasound-guided myolysis has been shown to reduce the volume of fibroids resulting in improvement and relief of symptoms. Many studies have demonstrated the medium- and long-term therapeutic effect of this procedure; few studies have reported adverse outcomes and most of the reported complications were minor events, such as pain, vaginal discharge and pelvic adhesions. It is a safe and effective treatment option that does not require hospitalisation and has a reduced risk of intraoperative bleeding compared to laparoscopic myomectomy.
 
Myolysis generates thermal effects within the myoma (60-80 °C) and results in three distinct therapeutic histological changes: (1) necrosis of the tissue cells by coagulation, (2) the formation of vascular thrombosis in the blood vessels supplying the myoma resulting in necrosis/ischaemic atrophy, and (3) the inactivation of hormone receptors within the myoma preventing the tumour tissue from growing.
 
In conclusion, the myolysis with radiofrequency or microwaves can be considered a minimally invasive and safe method for the treatment of uterine myomas through customisation and the possible combination of transvaginal, laparoscopic or hysteroscopic access, ensuring less pain, fewer complications and earlier healing. Standardisation of the ablation technique with pre-intervention biopsy and new technologies spare healthy uterine tissue and may change the future management of symptomatic uterine fibroids. It is important to carefully select patients to undergo myolysis, considering the number, size and location of the myoma.

Chung-Hoon Kim, et al. Transvaginal ultrasound-guided radiofrequency myolysis for uterine myomas. Hum Reprod. 2011 Mar;26(3):559-63. doi: 10.1093/humrep/deq366.

Ning Hai , Xiaoping Ding. Intrauterine adhesion after transvaginal ultrasound-guided radiofrequency myolysis. J Obstet Gynaecol Res . 2015 Nov;41(11):1851-4. doi: 10.1111/jog.12796.

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Performances

Myolysis or thermoablation of uterine fibroids

Myolysis or Thermoablation is a technique currently only performed in a few centres. Prof La Marca personally handles the method and receives patients from all over the country to perform this innovative therapy.

Radiofrequency and microwaves for gynaecological pathology

Radiofrequency and microwaves have been introduced into our clinical practice with excellent results. Prof La Marca is considered among the pioneers for the use of this procedure in gynaecology and receives patients from all over the country for the ultra minimally invasive treatment of uterine fibroids and adenomyosis.

In vitro fertilisation

In vitro fertilisation is a therapeutic strategy that is far from standardised. Like all medical and surgical practices, it is greatly affected by the technical skills and cultural updating of the practitioners involved. The results are therefore by far operator-dependent. This aspect is very little known, both by clinicians and patients.

Gynaecological endocrinology

The ovarian and menstrual function of women is extremely delicate and responds to a complex interaction between the centres (hypothalamus-pituitary) and the periphery (ovary-uterus).

Transfer to the blastocyst stage

In in vitro fertilisation, fertilised oocytes (zygotes) are kept in the laboratory, in incubators, under controlled temperature conditions (37°C) and an atmosphere with 5% oxygen and 6% carbon dioxide.

Infertility

It is well known that a considerable percentage of couples experience difficulties in conceiving. It is estimated that 10-15% of the population can be classified as infertile.

Recurrent abortion

Miscarriage is defined as a termination of pregnancy that occurs spontaneously within 24 weeks of gestation.

Diagnostic and operative hysteroscopy

Diagnostic Hysteroscopy is an endoscopic technique that can be performed in an outpatient setting using a hysteroscope.

Heterologous fertilisation

For certain clinical conditions, couples desiring offspring must resort to gametes (oocytes and/or spermatozoa) from voluntary and disinterested donors in order to fulfil their reproductive desire.

Fertility preservation

Over the past three decades, a phenomenon has taken hold in the Western world that is likely to have major implications for birth rates: the scheduling of births at a significantly older age than in the past.

Gynaecology and obstetrics

Gynaecology and Obstetrics is the medical discipline par excellence in the care of women. The aim of this clinical speciality has always been to care for the patient in all phases of her life.

Diagnosis and treatment of adenomyosis

At our clinic, the diagnosis and therapy of adenomyosis is performed to the most up-to-date standards. Prof La Marca is among the clinicians with the most experience in treating adenomyosis with thermoablation, an innovative therapeutic strategy for this disease.

Diagnostic examinations

Diagnostic examinations in gynaecology and obstetrics are nowadays very accurate and their correct execution and interpretation are the basis for the right clinical picture of the patient and the most appropriate therapeutic strategy.

Fibroids therapy

Uterine leiomyomas, more commonly called fibroids, are benign solid neoformations and represent the most frequent gynaecological neoplasm in women of childbearing age.

Uterine anomalies

An arrest of the organogenic stages can cause uterine and vaginal abnormalities of varying degrees.

Endometriosis

Endometriosis is a chronic, oestrogen-dependent inflammatory disease characterised by the presence of functional endometrial tissue (glands and stroma) in extrauterine sites.

Menstrual cycle disorders

It represents the most obvious and measurable clinical sign of pubertal maturation and in most women it occurs about two to three years after the onset of telarche with an average age of around 12½ years.

Intrauterine insemination

A Level I medically assisted procreation procedure based on the deposition of spermatozoa directly inside the uterine cavity. This procedure is carried out after ovulation induction.

Outpatient ultrasound aspiration of ovarian cysts

At our clinic, Prof La Marca personally handles the method. Ultrasound-guided aspiration of ovarian cysts is an ultra-mini-invasive method that is only available in very few centres nationwide. If there are the right indications, the method allows a rapid and non-invasive solution for the pathology in question

Tubal recanalisation

At our clinic, Prof La Marca personally handles the method. Endoscopic tubal recanalisation, where indicated, is today performed in only a few centres throughout Europe. The expertise is therefore concentrated in a limited number of experts capable of performing it correctly.

Assisted laser hatching

Laser-assisted hatching (LAH) is a laboratory technique that consists of cutting a small section of the zona pellucida (ZP).

IMSI, intracytoplasmic sperm injection

This is a level II technique used in the field of in vitro fertilisation. It takes the form of a variant of traditional ICSI, both of which consist of the direct injection of a spermatozoon into the cytoplasm of the oocyte.