Novel Anastomotic Technique for Uterine Transplant Using Utero-ovarian Veins for Venous Drainage and Internal Iliac Arteries for Perfusion in Two Laparoscopically Harvested Uteri.


Journal

Journal of minimally invasive gynecology
ISSN: 1553-4669
Titre abrégé: J Minim Invasive Gynecol
Pays: United States
ID NLM: 101235322

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
Historique:
received: 23 07 2018
revised: 29 10 2018
accepted: 05 11 2018
pubmed: 2 1 2019
medline: 6 8 2019
entrez: 2 1 2019
Statut: ppublish

Résumé

To evaluate 2 cases of uterine transplant surgery that used utero-ovarian veins as outflow channels, internal iliac arteries for perfusion, and the organ harvest surgery performed laparoscopically. Case study (Canadian Task Force Classification III). An urban, private, tertiary care hospital. Two patients, ages 30 and 24years, diagnosed with absolute uterine factor infertility secondary to Mayer-Rokitansky-Küster-Hauser syndrome underwent related living donor uterine transplants; donors were their mothers with normal menses. Retrieval of organs through minilaparotomy and laparoscopic harvest of donor internal iliac arteries and ovarian veins. Anastomosis was completed with bilateral donor internal iliac arteries to recipient internal iliac arteries in an end-to-end manner and with bilateral donor ovarian veins to recipient external iliac veins in an end-to-side manner. The lengths of utero-ovarian veins of both donors were 11 and 11cm on both sides; the lengths of the internal iliac arteries of both donors were 10 and 7.5cm on the left side and 10 and 6cm on the right side. The operative times for harvest surgery, bench surgery and transplant surgery were 2:40 and 3:20 hours, 34:32 and 33:30 min and 4:00 and 4:30 hours respectively for recipients 1 and 2. Daily postoperative uterine Doppler was completed through day 8 and then every other day and showed good intrauterine blood flow (i.e., low resistance arcuate vessel flow; resistance index < .5). Cervical biopsies on postoperative days 7 and 14 showed no evidence of rejection in either recipient. Both recipients started menstruating within 2 months of surgery. By using ovarian veins as outflow channels, the challenges involved in dissection along the internal iliac vein are avoided, and harvesting the donor internal iliac artery reduces the tension on vascular anastomosis. The selection of vessels to be harvested could make the technique reproducible, although larger studies are warranted to confirm results.

Identifiants

pubmed: 30599196
pii: S1553-4650(18)31431-6
doi: 10.1016/j.jmig.2018.11.021
pii:
doi:

Types de publication

Case Reports Journal Article

Langues

eng

Pagination

628-635

Informations de copyright

Copyright © 2019. Published by Elsevier Inc.

Auteurs

Shailesh Puntambekar (S)

Departments of General Surgery (Drs. Puntambekar, Panse, Sathe, Manchekar, Chitale, Parekh, Mehta, and Jathar). Electronic address: shase63@gmail.com.

Seema Puntambekar (S)

Obstetrics and Gynaecology (Drs. Puntambekar, Telang, Kulkarni, Warty, Kade, Parikh, Bakre, Chate, and Tiruke).

Milind Telang (M)

Obstetrics and Gynaecology (Drs. Puntambekar, Telang, Kulkarni, Warty, Kade, Parikh, Bakre, Chate, and Tiruke).

Pankaj Kulkarni (P)

Obstetrics and Gynaecology (Drs. Puntambekar, Telang, Kulkarni, Warty, Kade, Parikh, Bakre, Chate, and Tiruke).

Shardul Date (S)

Vascular Surgery (Dr. Date).

Mangesh Panse (M)

Departments of General Surgery (Drs. Puntambekar, Panse, Sathe, Manchekar, Chitale, Parekh, Mehta, and Jathar).

Ravindra Sathe (R)

Departments of General Surgery (Drs. Puntambekar, Panse, Sathe, Manchekar, Chitale, Parekh, Mehta, and Jathar).

Nikhil Agarkhedkar (N)

Plastic Surgery (Dr. Agarkhedkar).

Neeta Warty (N)

Obstetrics and Gynaecology (Drs. Puntambekar, Telang, Kulkarni, Warty, Kade, Parikh, Bakre, Chate, and Tiruke).

Sandesh Kade (S)

Obstetrics and Gynaecology (Drs. Puntambekar, Telang, Kulkarni, Warty, Kade, Parikh, Bakre, Chate, and Tiruke).

Manoj Manchekar (M)

Departments of General Surgery (Drs. Puntambekar, Panse, Sathe, Manchekar, Chitale, Parekh, Mehta, and Jathar).

Mihir Chitale (M)

Departments of General Surgery (Drs. Puntambekar, Panse, Sathe, Manchekar, Chitale, Parekh, Mehta, and Jathar).

Hirav Parekh (H)

Departments of General Surgery (Drs. Puntambekar, Panse, Sathe, Manchekar, Chitale, Parekh, Mehta, and Jathar).

Kajal Parikh (K)

Obstetrics and Gynaecology (Drs. Puntambekar, Telang, Kulkarni, Warty, Kade, Parikh, Bakre, Chate, and Tiruke).

Mehul Mehta (M)

Departments of General Surgery (Drs. Puntambekar, Panse, Sathe, Manchekar, Chitale, Parekh, Mehta, and Jathar).

Bhushan Kinholkar (B)

Medicine (Dr. Kinholkar).

Joy Shankar Jana (JS)

Anaesthesia (Drs. Jana, Pare, and Kanade).

Avinash Pare (A)

Anaesthesia (Drs. Jana, Pare, and Kanade).

Shailendra Kanade (S)

Anaesthesia (Drs. Jana, Pare, and Kanade).

Abhay Sadre (A)

Nephrology (Dr. Sadre).

Shirish Hardikar (S)

Radiology (Dr. Hardikar), Galaxy CARE Laparoscopy Institute, Pune, India.

Advait Jathar (A)

Departments of General Surgery (Drs. Puntambekar, Panse, Sathe, Manchekar, Chitale, Parekh, Mehta, and Jathar).

Tejashree Bakre (T)

Obstetrics and Gynaecology (Drs. Puntambekar, Telang, Kulkarni, Warty, Kade, Parikh, Bakre, Chate, and Tiruke).

Meenakshi Chate (M)

Obstetrics and Gynaecology (Drs. Puntambekar, Telang, Kulkarni, Warty, Kade, Parikh, Bakre, Chate, and Tiruke).

Raviraj Tiruke (R)

Obstetrics and Gynaecology (Drs. Puntambekar, Telang, Kulkarni, Warty, Kade, Parikh, Bakre, Chate, and Tiruke).

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