A comprehensive atlas of endometriosis lesion distribution across the lifespan
A landmark international study published in *Human Reproduction* provides critical insights into the natural history of endometriosis, a condition with significant gastrointestinal overlap. Analyzing data from 14,670 surgical cases across 104 centers, researchers mapped how lesion location and prevalence shift with patient age. Key findings reveal that superficial disease decreases linearly with age, while deep infiltrating endometriosis affecting sites like the bowel, sidewall, and uterosacral ligaments increases until plateauing around the early 30s. Notably, deep bladder disease peaks earlier, around age 28, before declining. Ovarian endometriomas follow a distinct quadratic pattern, with prevalence peaking near age 41. This cross-sectional analysis, the largest of its kind, offers a detailed epidemiological snapshot that clarifies disease progression patterns and challenges previous assumptions about its static nature.
Study Significance: For gastroenterologists, this research is pivotal for understanding complex pelvic pain and bowel symptoms that often mimic or coexist with primary gastrointestinal disorders like irritable bowel syndrome or inflammatory bowel disease. The detailed mapping of deep bowel and bladder involvement directly informs diagnostic endoscopy and surgical planning, highlighting the need for a multidisciplinary approach to chronic abdominal pain. These findings refine clinical expectations for disease presentation across different age groups, enabling more accurate patient counseling and tailored investigative strategies for symptoms potentially stemming from extra-gastrointestinal, gynecological pathology.
Source →Stay curious. Stay informed — with Science Briefing.
Always double check the original article for accuracy.
