JOURNAL ARTICLE
OBSERVATIONAL STUDY
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Lymph Node Involvement in Deep Infiltrating Intestinal Endometriosis: Does It Really Mean Anything?

STUDY OBJECTIVE: To review our data for any correlation between the severity of endometriosis and lymph node involvement.

DESIGN: Observational study with control (Canadian Task Force classification III).

SETTING: Public medical center.

PATIENTS: All women who underwent laparoscopic segmental rectal resection for endometriosis at our institution (Sacro Cuore Negrar Hospital) between 2000 and 2010.

INTERVENTIONS: We retrospectively included 140 cases of colorectal surgery for intestinal endometriosis performed between 2004 and 2010 in our institution. Based on histopathological analysis of specimens, we divided our population into 2 groups: 70 patients with lymph node involvement and 70 patients without lymph node involvement.

MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS: No statistical correlation was found between the positivity of lymph nodes and the rate of intestinal stenosis, the histopathological specimen infiltration rate and depth and the intestinal recurrence rate. Only a poor correlation was found with preoperative CA-125 serous levels.

CONCLUSION: The presence of lymph nodes involvement in intestinal resection specimens does not modify the natural history of the disease. The reason of its presence still has to be determined.

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