The complications during and following endoscopic excision of deep end
ometriosis were analysed, The data of 225 excisions performed in 212 w
omen had been collected prospectively into a database immediately foll
owing surgery and during the follow-up visit, The data confirmed the a
ssociation of severe pelvic pain and deep endometriosis, severe pelvic
pain being the only indication for surgery in 67, 78 and 76% of women
with type I (n = 99), type II (n = 55) and type III (n = 71) lesions
respectively, They confirmed that type II and type III were the larges
t lesions and that they were found predominantly in revised American F
ertility Society (AFS) class II, The duration of surgery decreased wit
h expertise (P < 0.01), but increased when deeper or larger lesions we
re excised (P < 0.0001) and when cystic ovarian endometriosis was also
present (P < 0.001), Excision was clinically judged to be complete in
94, 96 and 85% of women with type I, II or III lesions respectively,
In order to achieve this, part of the bowel wall had to be resected in
6.3% and part of the posterior vaginal fornix in 13.6% of cases; This
risk was associated mainly with type II or III lesions and with large
r lesions (P = 0.001), This was not considered as a complication, sinc
e all lesions could be repaired endoscopically and since follow-up was
uneventful, Complications were one ureter lesion and seven late bowel
perforations with peritonitis, Our data did not permit the evaluation
as to whether medical pretreatment could improve completeness of surg
ery or decrease the risk, They revealed, however, that in six of seven
women with type III lesions - in whom excision was judged to be incom
plete - no pretreatment had been given and that luteinizing hormone re
leasing hormone (LHRH) agonist treatment decreased the volume of type
II lesions (P = 0.04), In conclusion, complete endoscopic excision cou
ld be performed in over 90% of women with deep endometriosis, but requ
ired bowel surgery in over 6% of cases, Ureter lesions were rare, but
postoperative bowel perforations with peritonitis occurred in 2-3% of
cases. Medical pretreatment is advocated since LHRH agonist treatment
was shown to shrink the deep endometriotic lesion.