The Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecology of India
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VOL. 70 NUMBER 6 November-December  2020

Tracing the Journey of Endometrium, from Womb to Arm: Deltoid Endometriosis

Japleen Kaur1  Aashima Arora1  Sunil Gaba2  Pulkit Rastogi3  Rashmi Bagga1

Japleen Kaur MD, DNB is the Medical Officer (qHPV Project) in the Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Postgraduate Institute of Medical Education and Research (PGIMER), Chandigarh, India; Aashima Arora MD is the Assistant Professor of Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Postgraduate Institute of Medical Education and Research (PGIMER), Chandigarh, India; Sunil Gaba MS, MCh is the Additional Professor of Department of Plastic Surgery, Postgraduate Institute of Medical Education and Research (PGIMER), Chandigarh, India; Pulkit Rastogi MD, DM is the Assistant Professor of Department of Histopathology, Postgraduate Institute of Medical Education and Research (PGIMER), Chandigarh, India; Rashmi Bagga MD, DNB is the Professor of Department of Obstetrics  and Gynecology, Postgraduate Institute of Medical Education and Research (PGIMER), Chandigarh, India.

Aashima Arora aashicool84@gmail.com
1 Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Postgraduate Institute of Medical Education and Research (PGIMER), Gynecology Office, F Block, 3rd Floor, Nehru Hospital, Chandigarh, India
2 Department of Plastic Surgery, Postgraduate Institute of Medical Education and Research (PGIMER), Chandigarh, India
3 Department of Histopathology, Postgraduate Institute of Medical Education and Research (PGIMER), Chandigarh, India
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Dr. Japleen Kaur is currently working as a Medical Officer in the Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology at PGIMER, Chandigarh. She has completed her MBBS and MD from AIIMS, New Delhi. She has done her Senior Residency and Fellowship (Reproductive Endocrinology and Infertility) from PGIMER, Chandigarh. Being a gold medalist, she has numerous awards to her credit, for paper and poster presentations in National Conferences. She has contributed to scientific literature in the form of articles in journals as well as chapters in books. She is academically oriented with keen interest in teaching and research.

Abstract

Background Endometriosis is an enigma. Extrapelvic endometriosis is even more challenging, as theories of origin are difficult to explain. Very few cases of skeletal endometriosis have been reported in the literature.

Method We managed a case of 39-year-old nulliparous woman, who presented to the department of plastic surgery with complaints of a painful nodule measuring about 2 cm, in left upper arm since past 8 years. She had history of myomectomy 8 years back, while she was undergoing treatment for primary infertility. Differential diagnosis of extrapelvic endometriosis was made based on clinical history of cyclical pain and swelling, and she was referred to gynecology for hormonal treatment. MRI and FNAC were inconclusive. She underwent excision biopsy of the lesion.

Result Histopathology confirmed intramuscular endometriosis of left deltoid with positive margins. Postoperatively, she was started on dienogest 2 mg once daily and LNG IUS was inserted. Both were withdrawn a year later, due to side effects. It has been more than 6 months since removal of LNG IUS, and currently she is asymptomatic.

Conclusion To the best of our knowledge, this is the third case of deltoid endometriosis reported till date.

Keywords : Deltoid , Extrapelvic endometriosis , Dienogest , Soft tissue tumor , Excision

Endometriosis, in its various forms, has perturbed physicians since time immemorial. Sampson’s theory of retro- grade menstruation is the most popular one explaining the presence of this extrauterine pelvic endometrial tissue. How- ever, endometriosis has been reported from extrapelvic sites such as kidney, bladder, lungs and brain, which cannot be explained by this theory [1]. Rare cases of skeletal endometriosis have also been reported [2, 3]. We present a case of a 39-year-old nulliparous woman, who had presented to the department of plastic surgery at a tertiary institute with a painful swelling in the left shoulder. She had been asymptomatic till 8 years back, when she had undergone laparotomy and myomectomy under regional anesthesia, for an anterior wall intramural fibroid about 5 cm in size. A month later, she had developed complaints of pain, itching and general discomfort in the location of left upper arm. She specifically revealed that she had experienced some itching in the left arm while the surgery was in progress. After a year of onset of symptoms, she was able to feel a pea sized nodule in the same region. Further, she had complaints of cyclical pain in the nodule, which started before the onset of menses and resolved a few days after. She was prescribed analgesics on as-needed basis. She did not consent for MRI on account of claustrophobia. FNAC of the lesion done, 4 years back, was reported as possible soft tissue fibro-histiocytic lesion or benign adnexal tumor. She was advised excisional biopsy of the lesion, which she refused for cosmetic reasons. The pain became progressive in due course. When she finally came to our centre, a 2 × 2 cm swelling in the upper one-third of the anterolateral aspect of left shoulder was noted by the plastic surgeon. A differential diagnosis of endometriosis was kept, due to cyclical nature of the pain. Gynecologic consultation was sought, for possibility of medical manage- ment of endometriosis, circumventing surgery and conse- quent scarring. In the absence of definitive imaging or his- topathological evidence and FNAC suggesting possibility of a soft tissue tumor, empirical hormonal treatment was deemed inappropriate. She underwent open bore MRI of the left shoulder region (Fig. 1). As it was inconclusive, excision biopsy was eventually planned for her under general anes- thesia. Intraoperative findings are shown in Fig. 2a. Tumor was excised by dissection in the normal muscular tissue, in an attempt to minimize residual disease. Histopathology of the lesion was reported as endometriosis with involve- ment of proximal, lateral and medial margins and the deep resection plane (Fig. 2b). Therefore, she was started on the progestogen, dienogest 2 mg once daily (Endoreg, Jagsonpal Pharmaceuticals Pvt. Ltd., India). She had complaints of continuous spotting with intermittent heavy bleeding while on dienogest, so levonorgestrel-releasing intrauterine system (LNG-IUS) (Mirena, Bayer Healthcare Pharmaceuticals Inc, Berlin, Germany) was inserted 2 months post-surgery while continuing dienogest. She had recurrent episodes of vulvo- vaginal candidiasis and was given multiple courses of oral and local anti-fungals, without relief. Consequently, both progestogens were withdrawn a year later. She has been symptom free for last 8 months and surveillance was planned without active hormonal treatment as of now. Definite theory of origin of musculoskeletal endome- triosis is controversial, but vascular or lymphatic spread of endometrial cells seems a plausible explanation in our case [4]. Evidence in favor of the above is temporal relation to open myomectomy and trauma to the muscle (due to itching) during surgery. Cyclical change in the pain, swelling and character of skeletal endometriotic lesions should be considered consist- ent with endometriosis, although it has not been consistently reported [2]. Imaging is largely inconclusive, as MRI may show a varied picture, depending on the duration of lesion, which undergoes cyclic changes in proliferation, degeneration, hemorrhage and fibrosis. It has been described as being T1 hyperintense owing to methemoglobin and T2 hyper- intense, although a longstanding endometrioma can show low signal intensity on T2-weighted image due to high iron concentration [3]. Excision biopsy is definitive. Care- ful surgical technique is imperative in cases of intramus- cular endometriosis, as tissue implantation at the site of incision can further lead to scar endometriosis [5]. In our case, as margins were positive, she was given adjuvant oral progestogens for 12 months and intrauterine progestogen treatment for 10 months. Side effects of oral dienogest in the form of irregular bleeding and of LNG-IUS, such as recurrent vaginal infection, prompted cessation of these treatments. The ESHRE guidelines on endometriosis advise that 6–24 months of adjuvant treatment is bene- ficial for secondary prevention, after surgery for pelvic endometriosis [6]. By extrapolation, our patient can be reassured of a low chance of recurrence. To the best of our knowledge, this is the third case of deltoid endometriosis reported in literature, while being the first case in which postoperative adjuvant hormonal treatment was used.


Compliance with Ethical Standards 

Conflict of interest All authors declare that they have no conflict of interest.

Ethical Approval Ethical approval was not applicable for the purpose of this case report, as it was only observational in nature, and no experimental procedure was performed for the patient.

Informed Consent Informed consent was obtained from the patient for publication of this case study.

References

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