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Enhanced MR-guided focused ultrasound guidelines demonstrate improved efficacy and durability
Date: Tue, 8 May 2007
Data released on Tuesday show that MR-guided focused ultrasound (MRgFUS) is a more effective option for a broader population of uterine fibroid sufferers.
In a poster presented at the American College of Obstetrics and Gynecology (ACOG) annual meeting in San Diego, Phyllis Gee, M.D. of the North Texas Uterine Fibroid Institute in Plano, Texas, showed that women undergoing MRgFUS experience rapid and sustained relief from their condition and have a reduced need for alternative, invasive treatments in the future.
GE and InSightec, a company that develops non-invasive therapy systems, developed the world's first magnetic resonance (MR) image guided focused ultrasound system. InSightec's ExAblate 2000 system, approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) in October 2004, works exclusively in combination with GE's Signa MR system to non-invasively treat symptomatic uterine fibroids.
"These findings further underscore the utility of MRgFUS as a long-lasting, non-invasive option for the millions of women suffering from uterine fibroids," said Dr. Gee. "With these expanded treatment guidelines, we are able to successfully treat more of the tumor and virtually eliminate the need for future hysterectomies." Additional data presented at ACOG this week by David Lee, Ph.D., Senior Director, Health Economics and Outcomes Research, GE Healthcare, showed that clinically significant uterine fibroids are common among women in their prime working years and are associated with several debilitating co-morbid conditions. The research also showed that uterine fibroid treatments impose substantial direct and indirect costs on employers, and that nearly one in three women treated surgically for uterine fibroids experiences an adverse event.
"These new data suggest that uterine fibroids impose a substantial clinical burden on women, and a tremendous economic burden on employers. MRgFUS holds the promise of lessening this burden by offering women a non-invasive treatment option for this debilitating condition," said Dr. Lee.
Uterine fibroids: a non-invasive treatment with durable results
According to NIH, uterine fibroids are the most common, non-cancerous tumors in women of childbearing age and the second most common reason reproductive women undergo surgery. Uterine fibroids, the cause of more than 200,000 hysterectomies every year, have no known cause and only a few treatment options, also according to NIH.
According to a report by RAND Corporation, an international non-profit research organization, direct costs associated with treating uterine fibroids are more than $1bn annually. Traditionally, treatment options for uterine fibroids have included invasive and minimally invasive procedures such as hysterectomy, myomectomy or uterine artery embolization (UAE). Hormonal therapy, the only non-invasive treatment available, offers only temporary relief of symptoms, and fibroids frequently grow back once therapy is terminated.
Summary of data
Dr. Gee's poster: Enhanced MR-guided focused ultrasound surgery (MRgFUS) guidelines demonstrates improved efficacy and durability for the treatment of uterine myoma
Source: GE Healthcare
In a poster presented at the American College of Obstetrics and Gynecology (ACOG) annual meeting in San Diego, Phyllis Gee, M.D. of the North Texas Uterine Fibroid Institute in Plano, Texas, showed that women undergoing MRgFUS experience rapid and sustained relief from their condition and have a reduced need for alternative, invasive treatments in the future.
GE and InSightec, a company that develops non-invasive therapy systems, developed the world's first magnetic resonance (MR) image guided focused ultrasound system. InSightec's ExAblate 2000 system, approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) in October 2004, works exclusively in combination with GE's Signa MR system to non-invasively treat symptomatic uterine fibroids.
"These findings further underscore the utility of MRgFUS as a long-lasting, non-invasive option for the millions of women suffering from uterine fibroids," said Dr. Gee. "With these expanded treatment guidelines, we are able to successfully treat more of the tumor and virtually eliminate the need for future hysterectomies." Additional data presented at ACOG this week by David Lee, Ph.D., Senior Director, Health Economics and Outcomes Research, GE Healthcare, showed that clinically significant uterine fibroids are common among women in their prime working years and are associated with several debilitating co-morbid conditions. The research also showed that uterine fibroid treatments impose substantial direct and indirect costs on employers, and that nearly one in three women treated surgically for uterine fibroids experiences an adverse event.
"These new data suggest that uterine fibroids impose a substantial clinical burden on women, and a tremendous economic burden on employers. MRgFUS holds the promise of lessening this burden by offering women a non-invasive treatment option for this debilitating condition," said Dr. Lee.
Uterine fibroids: a non-invasive treatment with durable results
According to NIH, uterine fibroids are the most common, non-cancerous tumors in women of childbearing age and the second most common reason reproductive women undergo surgery. Uterine fibroids, the cause of more than 200,000 hysterectomies every year, have no known cause and only a few treatment options, also according to NIH.
According to a report by RAND Corporation, an international non-profit research organization, direct costs associated with treating uterine fibroids are more than $1bn annually. Traditionally, treatment options for uterine fibroids have included invasive and minimally invasive procedures such as hysterectomy, myomectomy or uterine artery embolization (UAE). Hormonal therapy, the only non-invasive treatment available, offers only temporary relief of symptoms, and fibroids frequently grow back once therapy is terminated.
Summary of data
Dr. Gee's poster: Enhanced MR-guided focused ultrasound surgery (MRgFUS) guidelines demonstrates improved efficacy and durability for the treatment of uterine myoma
- Patients treated under expanded and commercial treatment guidelines achieved greater nonperfused myoma volumes and greater symptom relief than those treated under the pivotal study guidelines. The symptom severity score (SSS) was used to quantify the results.
- 86 per cent of patients treated with commercial treatment guidelines sustained a ten-point or greater improvement in SSS by 12 months compared with 84 per cent of patients treated with expanded treatment guidelines and 71 per cent of patients treated with pivotal guidelines.
- Expanded and commercial treatment guidelines resulted in greater reduction in symptom severity score at three, six, 12 and 24 months. Durable and sustained symptom relief lasted up to 36 months.
- 86 per cent of patients treated with commercial treatment guidelines sustained a ten-point or greater improvement in SSS by 12 months compared with 84 per cent of patients treated with expanded treatment guidelines and 71 per cent of patients treated with pivotal guidelines.
- One in 100 (~450,000) women with employer-provided insurance have clinically significant uterine fibroids
- These women have a high comorbidity burden
- Nearly one-half were treated with hysterectomy
- These women have a high comorbidity burden
- Nearly one in three women treated surgically for uterine fibroids had an adverse event
- Approximately seven per cent of women treated surgically for uterine fibroids were re-treated within a year. Treatment failures were most common for endometrial ablation.
- Total (direct and indirect) short-term treatment costs were highest for hysterectomy ($17,373), followed by myomectomy, ($16,460), UAE ($14,064), and endometrial ablation ($6,825)
- Lost work and disability accounted for 18 per cent of total costs for UAE, compared to 28.7 per cent for endometrial ablation, 40.5 per cent for hysterectomy, and 42.1 per cent for myomectomy
Source: GE Healthcare







