BACKGROUND: Surgical treatment of obese female patients represents a real challenge. Over the last decade, minimally invasive techniques for hysterectomy have emerged.
These approaches reduce the invasiveness of standard surgical procedures while maintaining efficacy and feasibility. OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the rates of perioperative, early, mid-term and late postoperative complications in very obese [body mass index (BMI) >= 35 and = 40 kg/m(2)) women who underwent total (non-radical) hysterectomy.
DESIGN: A prospective comparative multi-centre non-randomized study. METHODS: In total, 328 consecutive total (non-radical) hysterectomies were performed at seven teaching gynaecological centres.
Of these, 153 (46.6%) were performed using an open laparotomy (LT) approach and 175 (53.4%) were performed laparoscopically (LS). All data were collected by medical specialists at the pre-operative examination prior to surgery, during surgery and three times postoperatively (during hospital stay, at 6-week follow-up and 6 months following surgery).
Another analysis considered a total of 206 women who underwent laparoscopic hysterectomy. The subjects were divided according to BMI into 120 very obese women (BMI >= 35 and = 40 kg/m(2)).
RESULTS: The total number of composite perioperative complications was significantly lower in the LS group (p = 0.006). Composite complications occurred significantly more often in patients in the LT group compared with the LS group in the early (p < 0.001) and mid-term (p < 0.001) postoperative periods.
In the late postoperative period, the total number of composite postoperative complications did not differ significantly between the groups (p < 0.396). Among 206 patients who underwent laparoscopic hysterectomy, the number of complications was generally low; the rates of composite perioperative (p = 0.393), early (p = 0.642), mid-term (p = 0.738) and late (p = 1) postoperative complications were generally low; and frequency did not differ significantly with BMI.
CONCLUSION: The LS approach does not increase intra-operative morbidity associated with surgery, and has significantly better outcomes in terms of the postoperative complication rate.