Fibroids Flashcards
1
Q
Define Fibroids.
A
Benign tumours (leiomyomas) arising from myometrium.
- Types:
- Submucosal (within cavity)
- Intramural
- Subserosal (can undergo secondary changes)
2
Q
What are the risk factors for Fibroids?
A
- BONE
- Black women + FHx
- Obesity
- Nulliparity
- Expecting/pregnant
3
Q
What are the protective factors for Fibroids?
A
- Smoking
- (Grand) multiparity
- COCP
4
Q
What changes do fibroids go through?
A
-
Hormone-dependent - contain lots of oestrogen and progesterone receptors
- Enlarge in pregnancy (due to oestrogen) and shrink in menopause
- Degeneration
- Hyaline degeneration
- Calcification– post menopausal
- Red degeneration – coagulative necrosis in pregnancy, cystic change
5
Q
What are the signs and symptoms of fibroids?
A
- Asymptomatic
- Dysfunction uterine bleeding
- Miscarriage
- Sub-fertility
- Abdominal swelling
- Pressure symptoms on bowel or bladder
- O/E: palpable pelvic masses, uterine enlargement
6
Q
What are the appropriate investigations for suspected fibroids?
A
- 1st line: TVUSS - if >4mm when not expected, do a hysteroscopy
- 2nd line: OPD hysterocopy
- 3rd line: Laparoscopy ± biopsy
- Bloods - FBC (anaemia), TFTs (hypo), clotting screen
7
Q
What is the management of fibroids <3cm?
A
- Hormonal contraception
- Bleeding: Tranexamic acid, 1g TDS
- Pain: Mefenamic acid
- Surgical (if severe symptoms):
- Endometrial ablation (will need continued contraception)
- Hysterectomy
8
Q
What is the management of fibroids >3cm?
A
- 1st line:
- Tranexamic acid, 1g TDS
- Mefenamic acid / NSAIDs
- Hormonal contraception
- Surgical
- Injectable GnRH Agonist (short-term, usually used prior to surgery)
- Ulipristal Acetate (short-term, selective progesterone receptor modulator)
- Hysteroscopic (TCRF)
- Myomectomy - best for improving fertility
- Hysterectomy
- Endometrial ablation - removes fertility; must use contraception
- Radiological
- Uterine artery embolisation
9
Q
Why is injectable GnRH agonists and ulipristal acetate used before surgery?
A
- Shrinks fibroids
- Reduce bleeding
- GnRH agonists induces a menopausal state (shuts down ovarian oestradiol production)
10
Q
What are the complications of fibroids?
A
- Pregnancy
- Red degeneration
- Miscarriage
- Malpresentation/transverse lie
- PTL
- PPH
- Prognosis:
- 10-year recurrence rate after myomectomy is 20%
- Fibroids regress and calcify after menopause
- Leiomyosarcoma (<1 per 100,000):
- Very rare cancer; smooth muscle cancer of the uterus
- Associated with Gardner’s syndrome (sub-type of FAP with extra-colonic polyps)
11
Q
What are the signs and symptoms of red degeneration of fibroids?
A
- Low fever
- Pain
- Vomiting
12
Q
What is the management of red degeneration of fibroids?
A
- Conservative - resolves in 4-7 days