OBGYN.net
Conference Coverage
From the 32nd Annual Meeting of the
American Association of Gynecological Laparoscopists (AAGL)
![]() |
Sexual dysfunction following hysterectomy
|
Barbara Nesbitt: Hi, I am
Barbara Nesbitt, I am the editor of OBGYN.net and I am here with one of our
editorial advisors, Dr. Michael Moore, of Denver, Colorado. Hello, Dr. Moore.
Michael Moore, MD: Hello, Barbara.
Barbara Nesbitt: We are going to talk about
sexual dysfunction in the female patient following hysterectomy and the new
things that Dr. Moore has read about worldwide and what they are doing for it.
Michael Moore, MD: Thank you, Barbara. Thank
you for the invitation to talk about a very important topic.
The uterus is a reproductive organ and it is part of your sexual organs as a
woman, so when you have a problem that requires hysterectomy, there is going to
be some potential impact on sexual functioning. A lot of information is
available today in the lay literature that talks about hysterectomy and a lot of
women come in having read these and they are scared to death of a hysterectomy
because of all the information or, should I say misinformation that is out there
about the loss of sexual function that follows hysterectomy.
The history, because I just got through doing a lecture on sexual function and
hysterectomy, has enlightened me with new knowledge. I set out to gather
information for this talk and much of the information that I was aware of in the
early ‘90s indicated that you could anticipate a woman would have a 20% to 30%
chance of sexual dysfunction following a hysterectomy and the literature
attributed that to the hysterectomy itself because we know uterine contractions
occur during orgasm and so, because of that, removal of the uterus was perhaps
felt to affect sexual function. All the older literature, which is mostly
retrospective information, was going along with that.
Now, what you have to realize from retrospective data is that they identify,
say, 100 women who have had a hysterectomy in the past. Now they send those
ladies a questionnaire and it might be a year, two, three years after their
hysterectomy. You have got to then wait for these questionnaires to come back.
Now, if you get 70 out of 100 questionnaires back, you are doing really well.
But who are going to be the ladies who respond? Maybe more who are unhappy with
the procedure and are not happy with the outcome. In the ‘90s, there are about
eight or nine really good prospective cohort studies. Now, prospective means the
information was gathered before the hysterectomy about sexual dysfunction and
then sexual information was gathered six months or a year or eighteen months
after the hysterectomy. It is a cohort because it is a group of women who then
have the operation and we compare their questionnaire results beforehand and see
their questionnaire results afterward. There is no control group and it is a
very important part of scientific studies to have a control group. So that gives
us some indication as to how women might do.
A very, very good study of about 150 women with 18 months of follow-up not only
looked at the women’s sexual function, as well as the quality of the experience,
which I think was unique to most of the studies - I think that is what drew me
to this one particularly - and it looked at psychological parameters. It
indicated, at least the authors drew the conclusion that the women’s sexual
functioning before the hysterectomy dictated to some degree her sexual function
afterward.
The majority of women who have hysterectomy notice no difference in sexual
function. There is a group of women who actually find it has improved. They were
starting to have pain with intercourse because of an enlarged fibroid uterus,
now they can have comfortable intercourse and that does improve the quality of
the experience. But some women also develop problems afterward and this
represents a challenge. Who can we anticipate might develop problems afterward?
Something that appears in the literature, speculated on by many authors, is the
woman who does not want to have a hysterectomy at all who is the woman who has a
problem.
There have been several randomized control trials looking at the effect of
hysterectomy on sexual function. These are good because they have a control
group, as well as the treatment group, and that becomes very important because
then you can say, here’s a group of women who didn’t have a hysterectomy, had an
endometrial ablation procedure, and that group is compared to a group of women
who entered the study - all of these women enter the study at the same, so 200
women entered the study - 100 randomly are assigned to non- hysterectomy
treatment, i.e. endometrial ablation. The other half is assigned to
hysterectomy, but they all went in knowing they were going to get one or the
other. They all had the same set of information and what the studies do not tell
us is how many women interviewed and then once they heard all that decided not
to. That’s very important because these ladies were prepared for this and,
indeed, at one year and two studies that looked at non- hysterectomy treatment
versus hysterectomy, the sexual functioning is the same in both groups. There
was no difference in preserving the uterus and just removing the uterine lining
versus removing the uterus.
Even with removal of the cervix, because there is a lot about supracervical
surgery these days: keep the cervix preserve sexual function. Two randomized
control trials, one to two years of follow-up, again, no differences in sexual
function if you keep the cervix or you take it. Now there was a small group of
women who did develop deep pain with intercourse if their cervix is removed
compared to the women who did not. So there may be some effect in terms of pain
if you remove the cervix. Unfortunately, we do not have 20 year data and that
may become very important, but I think it is really important for a woman who
recognizes inside when she hears that “H” word come out that she really take the
“how does it feel” approach because not every woman wants a hysterectomy to take
care of their problems.
A 45-year-old patient came to see me just the day before I came to AAGL. She had
never had children but she said, I do not plan on having children. She had a
couple fibroids and when she got the report back over the phone that is when she
first heard it. She really felt inside that this was not good and she had the
courage to sit down with her doctor and say, this is not for me, I do not want a
hysterectomy to take care of this problem. Unfortunately, the doctor had
presumed that because she was over 40, did not plan on having children, that
that would be the best thing for her. On the other hand, as we sat down and
talked and she shared that with me, it did not make me feel good that I always
approach patients with never presuming that. With fibroid tumors especially,
there are three really good treatments. One is hysterectomy, and if it can be
done laparoscopically even better because there is less pain and a much faster
recovery. There is also the ability to do laparoscopic myomectomy, so you can
remove the fibroids instead of removing the uterus and for a woman over 45, she
is liable not to have any other intervention and can go to menopause and not
have anything else done and her goals have been met: she did not have a
hysterectomy, she has not had an adverse effect on her, whether it is
psychological function, urinary function, bowel function, sexual function.
The type of woman who accepts hysterectomy, as a good procedure will do well,
but the woman who does not accept that premise will not do well. She is going to
have problems because she is going to blame it on that hysterectomy she did not
want. The third option we offer women who do not want to have a period, but they
are sick and tired of the heavy bleeding and they do not want a hysterectomy.
There, we can combine a technique where we can remove the fibroids and the
uterine lining - this can all be done laparoscopically and the woman will go
home the day of her surgery. Our average patient is back at work in ten to
fourteen days and they are sexually active again in approximately three weeks,
on average. These laparoscopic surgeries work very, very well to cut down on
pain in recovery.
A properly counseled woman should be told, yes, there could be a change in
sexual function, but if the doctor explores her sexuality with her and prepares
her for that and discusses the alternatives to hysterectomy that are appropriate
for her, then that woman will guide the doctor to what procedure is right for
her because she will not allow herself to undergo a procedure that
psychologically attacks her defense mechanisms. So I always discuss three
alternatives when women have fibroids. Now with endometriosis, pelvic pain,
sometimes non-hysterectomy alternatives are not good choices. For pelvic
prolapse, we know you do not have to have a hysterectomy to have your prolapse
corrected, so always discuss keeping your uterus if you want to and I let the
woman make her choice. Some women, they are ready for it, they find it is a good
operation; they do not have certain feelings about it. Other women do and you
have got to respect a woman’s feelings, just like I would want someone to
respect my feelings.
Barbara Nesbitt: Now, I had a hysterectomy
years ago and I have not had any problems, it was abdominal and I was extremely
fortunate and also had a really good GYN who did it. So what you are saying is
that if a woman is a little nervous or reticent prior to having it done, she is
probably more apt to not be completely happy afterward.
Michael Moore, MD: I always think so.
Barbara Nesbitt: Everything is not explained
and she is not comfortable with the whole thing, she might be more apt to be one
that is unhappy post-surgery.
Michael Moore, MD: Unless that woman can
voice that concern to the physician, just say ‘I don’t want that.’
Barbara Nesbitt: When do I say this,
obviously prior to the procedure? This is new for women, younger women are
probably better at it, I am not sure, but a lot of women feel that they should
not be questioning their physicians.
Michael Moore, MD: Oh, yes.
Barbara Nesbitt: So for the women who were
born in that time or think that way, we are trying to educate and that is why
you are here. What should I say to you on that visit before we decide on which
procedure to do? I could just say to you, doctor, I’m worried about this, I’m
married or not or whatever, but I’m worried about my sex life after the
procedure. Should she just not have the courage to say that or what should she
say?
Michael Moore, MD: Oh, I hope she does or at
least learn some more about what she is going to have. I encourage patients to
go to the Internet, to seek out more information, even to get other opinions
about the procedures they are considering because this is a big step and they
are going to have to live with the outcome.
Two things happen: one, I think physicians go through training, they get a
knee-jerk reflex that hysterectomy is the right operation for these problems.
Now, some physicians are not trained to do myomectomies, they are worried about
the bleeding associated with the removal of the fibroids, but not the uterus.
What we know is that the proper surgical techniques result in good outcomes,
quite frequently that big, bad, bloody cases are not usually the rule in
well-trained hands. But if you do not have that skill set, you may not offer
that to the patient and yet, if you do not offer that to the patient, then they
may not do well because they might take that other option, so we always lay out
the options and that way the patient does not have to be her own advocate. But a
woman must be aware that there are all sorts of alternatives, she should be
encouraged to look for those alternatives and look into her own heart about how
she feels because this does affect your sexual organs, and it may effect your
sexual functioning.
In the largest cohort study, about 1,200 women out of Maryland, they showed that
about 5% to 10% who did not have sexual dysfunction problems before the
hysterectomy will develop sexual dysfunctions problems. Some of those may be
relational problems: the husband or boyfriend becomes a jerk after the
operation; maybe he did not want her to have the hysterectomy. I have run into
that before, where the man has that feeling. They feel they are no longer a
woman and women feel that way, so by using patient-specific therapy and not
making the patient fit into the therapy, we will have better outcomes.
Barbara Nesbitt: Okay, thank you, but I just
want to throw one thing because this is what I am hearing. What I am hearing is
that there are possibly three options: hysterectomy, myomectomy or the ablation.
Michael Moore, MD: For fibroids.
Barbara Nesbitt: So, number one, before you
even get into sexual function following a hysterectomy, a woman should ask, do
you do these, all three procedures and how often have you done them? Pose those
good questions and then when you are comfortable with the doctor who is going to
do the procedure is qualified to do more than just one and you have made your
selection that you have found a really good GYN, then you should be comfortable
in sitting down and exploring post-op problems, sexual dysfunction, but she
wants a good GYN that explains the alternatives.
Michael Moore, MD: I agree, Barbara, I think
the doctor is the one who should bring this forward, not the patient, if at all
possible.
Barbara Nesbitt: But the patient should be
aware if she is hearing hysterectomy only, she should be starting to ask
questions, like why and maybe because it’s your only option, but he will explain
that to you and that gets a good rapport going, I think, with the patient and
the physician then they can talk about the procedures that will be done and when
I have a good rapport with you, then I can ask other things.
Michael Moore, MD: Of course.
Barbara Nesbitt: I think what you said is,
make sure you have a physician who is trained in different types of
alternatives, right?
Michael Moore, MD: Yes.
Barbara Nesbitt: I am not trying to put
words in your mouth, but make sure you are happy with who will be doing the
procedure and makes you comfortable in the fact that they are well qualified and
then I think the woman has this wonderful opportunity to feel comfortable and
not panic.
Michael Moore, MD: That would be the ideal
situation.
Barbara Nesbitt: You have let them all know
that there are options, they should speak up and they should be comfortable in
asking their physicians just about anything they want to ask them, that is why
they are going to them.
Michael Moore, MD: That is the case. Yet a
woman should not be afraid to question the expertise of her physician because in
this day and age, there has never been such a technological gap in training.
Most physicians graduated before the age of modern laparoscopy, they do not feel
comfortable doing laparoscopic surgery, they do not have the training and
therefore they do not offer the options. They are aware of them and they should
offer therapies they do not do, that is the ethics of medicine.
Barbara Nesbitt: Well, I thank you and I
think this will help educate a lot of women before the procedure as well as
after. Thank you, Doctor; it has been wonderful talking to you.
Michael Moore, MD: I hope so. Thank you for
taking an interest in this subject.
Barbara Nesbitt: Thank you.

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