The impact of metronidazole on pain persistence after fertility-sparing endometriosis surgery: METROFERT randomized study
Recommended Citation
Quevedo A, Parikh S, Reinstine J, Chamseddine P, Gaskins JT, Whalen C, Biscette S, and Pasic RP. The impact of metronidazole on pain persistence after fertility-sparing endometriosis surgery: METROFERT randomized study. Am J Obstet Gynecol 2024.
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
7-15-2024
Publication Title
American journal of obstetrics and gynecology
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Recent studies have shown that a disrupted microbiome is associated with endometriosis. Despite endometriosis affecting 1 in 10 reproductive-aged women, there is a lack of innovative and nonhormonal long-term effective treatments. Studies have reported an approximately 20% to 37.5% persistence of pain after fertility-sparing endometriosis surgery. Metronidazole has been shown to decrease inflammatory markers and the size of endometriosis lesions in animal studies.
OBJECTIVE: To determine if modulating the microbiome with oral metronidazole for 14 days after fertility-sparing endometriosis surgery decreases pain persistence postoperatively.
STUDY DESIGN: This was a randomized, multicenter, placebo-controlled, double-blind trial. Individuals 18 to 50 years old were prospectively randomized to placebo vs oral metronidazole for 14 days immediately after endometriosis fertility-sparing excision surgery. The primary outcome was binary, subjective pain persistence at 6 weeks postoperatively. Secondary outcomes included quality of life, sexual function, and endometriosis-associated pain scores according to the Endometriosis Health Profile-5, Female Sexual Function Index, and a visual analog scale.
RESULTS: One hundred fifty-two participants were approached from October 2020 to October 2023 to enroll in the study. Sixty-four participants were excluded either because they did not meet inclusion or exclusion criteria or because they declined to participate. Eighty-eight participants were randomized in a 1:1 ratio to receive either the oral placebo or metronidazole after endometriosis excision surgery; 18.2% of participants were lost to follow-up or discontinued treatment and this was not significantly different between the 2 arms, yielding a final cohort of 72 participants. Baseline demographics of the 2 study groups were similar. There was no statistically significant improvement in the primary outcome of binary subjective pain persistence between the metronidazole group compared to placebo (84% vs 88%, P=.74) at 6 weeks postoperatively. Further, no significant differences between treatments were detected in the secondary outcomes.
CONCLUSION: A postoperative 14-day regimen of oral metronidazole immediately after fertility-sparing endometriosis surgery was not associated with any significant differences between treatment groups in the persistence of endometriosis-related pain symptoms compared to placebo at 6 weeks.
PubMed ID
39019388
ePublication
ePub ahead of print