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Research Article

Dilatation and curettage fails to detect most focal lesions in the uterine cavity in women with postmenopausal bleeding

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Pages 1131-1136 | Published online: 07 Aug 2009
 

Abstract

Objective. To determine the prevalence of focally growing lesions in the uterine cavity in women with postmenopausal bleeding and endometrium ≥5 mm and the extent to which such lesions can be correctly diagnosed by D&C. Methods. In a prospective study, 105 women with postmenopausal bleeding and endometrium ≥5 mm at transvaginal ultrasound examination underwent diagnostic hysteroscopy, D&C and hysteroscopic resection of any focally growing lesion still left in the uterine cavity after D&C. Twenty-four women also underwent hysterectomy. If the histological diagnosis differed between specimens from the same patient, the most relevant diagnosis was considered the final one. Results. Eighty percent (84/105) of the women had pathology in the uterine cavity, and 98% (82/84) of the pathological lesions manifested a focal growth pattern at hysteroscopy. In 87% of the women with focal lesions in the uterine cavity, the whole or parts of the lesion remained in situ after D&C. D&C missed 58% (25/43) of polyps, 50% (5/10) of hyperplasias, 60% (3/5) of complex atypical hyperplasias, and 11% (2/19) of endometrial cancers. The agreement between the D&C diagnosis and the final diagnosis was excellent (94%) in women without focally growing lesions at hysteroscopy. Conclusion. If there are focal lesions in the uterine cavity, hysteroscopy with endometrial resection is superior to D&C for obtaining a representative endometrial sample in women with postmenopausal bleeding and endometrium ≥5 mm.

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