11 research outputs found
Reassessment of Surgical Procedures for Complex Obstructive Genital Malformations: A Case Series on Different Surgical Approaches
The objective of this case series was to describe different uterus-preserving surgical approaches and outcomes in patients with complex obstructive Müllerian duct malformation caused by cervical and/or vaginal anomalies. A retrospective analysis was performed including patients undergoing uterovaginal anastomosis (n = 6) or presenting for follow-up (n = 2) at the Department for Gynecology at the University of Tuebingen between 2017 and 2022. Uterovaginal anastomosis was performed with a one-step combined vaginal and laparoscopic approach (method A), a two-step/primary open abdominal approach with primary vaginal reconstruction followed by abdominal uterovaginal anastomosis after vaginal epithelization (method B) or an attempted one-step approach followed by secondary open abdominal uterovaginal anastomosis due to reobstruction (method A/B). Patients presented at a mean age of 15 years. Two patients were treated by method A, four by method B and two by method A/B. Functional anastomosis was established in seven of eight patients, with normal vaginal length in all patients. Concerning uterovaginal anastomosis, the primary open abdominal approach with or without previous vaginal reconstruction seems to have a higher success rate with fewer procedures and should be implemented as standard surgical therapy for complex obstructive genital malformations including the cervix
BI-RADS similar to 3 lesions at contrast-enhanced breast MRI: is an initial short-interval follow-up necessary?
Background Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) BI-RADS® 3 lesions should have a very high probability of being benign. To prove benignity most institutions do follow-up MRI. Purpose To evaluate the necessity of initial short-interval follow-up after 6 months as it is suggested for mammographic BI-RADS®3 lesions. Material and Methods We analyzed 163 consecutive MRI-BI-RADS® 3 lesions on follow-up MRI: 75 masses (46%), 67 foci (41.1%), and 21 (12.9%) non-mass-like enhancing lesions (NMLE). Results During MRI follow-up (mean time, 563 days) 20% of the lesions disappeared, 23% decreased, 52% did not change, and 4.9% showed increase. All increasing lesions were biopsied (5 benign, 2 ductal carcinoma in situ, 1 invasive carcinoma). The rate of malignancy was 1.8%. All malignant lesions (1 mass, 1 focus, 1 NMLE) showed increase at initial follow-up after a mean interval of 190 days. Conclusion In this study the malignancy rate of MRI-BI-RADS® 3 lesions corresponded to mammographic BI-RADS® 3 lesions. Initial short-interval MRI should be suggested to identify malignant MRI-BI-RADS® 3 lesions. </jats:sec