MRI Enhances Endometriosis Diagnoses

MRI may allow clinicians to noninvasively diagnose a painful uterine condition and improve surgical planning to relieve it, according to a study published in the online edition of Radiology. Endometriosis is a chronic and painful disease that results when uterine tissue, called endometrium, grows outside the uterus. Endometrium can attach to other organs, such as the ovaries, fallopian tubes, bowels and bladder. Endometriosis is one of the most common health problems affecting women. According to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, approximately 5 million American women have endometriosis. Symptoms include chronic pelvic pain, lower back pain, painful sexual intercourse, painful menstrual cramps, fatigue, and infertility.
 
"Pelvic MRI at 3 Tesla is a noninvasive technique that allows a complete examination of the pelvis," says the study’s lead author, Nathalie Hottat, MD, from the Department of Radiology at Erasme Hospital and the Université Libre de Bruxelles in Brussels, Belgium. "It accurately depicts all locations of deep endometriosis."
 
There are two types of endometriosis: superficial and subperitoneal (deep). Deep endometriosis infiltrates areas of the cervix, vagina, and/or the colon and, less frequently, the bladder and ureter. Superficial endometriosis can be treated with laparoscopy, but deep endometriosis sometimes requires complete surgical excision of the lesions. It is important that the diagnosis and staging of the disease distinguish between the two types in order to guide the surgeon to schedule the most appropriate procedure. Therefore, the researchers tried to determine the accuracy of 3T pelvic MRI in diagnosing the presence of deep endometriosis and to evaluate colon wall involvement.
 
The researchers studied 41 women, age 20 to 46, with suspected endometriosis. MRI was performed prior to surgery. MRI accurately diagnosed 26 of 27 cases of deep endometriosis. In addition, MR images accurately depicted specific locations of deep endometrial lesions. Colon wall involvement was present in 32% of patients with deep endometriosis. MRI was effective at distinguishing different layers of the affected colon wall and accurately depicted the degree of colon wall invasion.
 
"The 3T MRI results also demonstrated a high negative predictive value of 93.3%," Hottat says, "meaning that MRI findings accurately ruled out deep endometriosis in patients with superficial endometriosis, allowing the surgeon to perform the less invasive laparoscopic procedure."
 
— Source: Radiological Society of North America