TY - JOUR
T1 - Biomarkers of endometriosis
AU - Fassbender, Amelie
AU - Vodolazkaia, Alexandra
AU - Saunders, Philippa
AU - Lebovic, Dan
AU - Waelkens, Etienne
AU - De Moor, Bart
AU - D'Hooghe, Thomas
N1 - Funding Information:
A.F. has nothing to disclose. A.V. has nothing to disclose. P.S. has received a grant from the Medical Research Council UK , and is a board member of MRC Physiological Systems and Medicine (unrelated to this work). D.L. has received grants and has grants pending from Abbott Pharmaceutical and royalties from UpToDate (both unrelated to this work). E.W. has nothing to disclose. B.D.M. has nothing to disclose. T.D'H. has received a grant from the World Endometriosis Research Foundation , and reports consultancies with Bayer Schering, Schering Plough (Merck), Merck Serono, Astellas, Arresto, Roche, and Proteomika ; and grants/grants pending from Merck Serono, Schering Plough, Ferring, Arresto, Roche, and Proteomika (all unrelated to this work).
PY - 2013/3/15
Y1 - 2013/3/15
N2 - A noninvasive test for endometriosis would be useful for the early detection of endometriosis in symptomatic women who have pelvic pain and/or subfertility with normal ultrasound results. This would include nearly all cases of minimal-to-mild endometriosis, some cases of moderate-to-severe endometriosis without a clearly visible ovarian endometrioma, and cases with pelvic adhesions and/or other pelvic pathology that might benefit from surgery to improve pelvic pain and/or subfertility. This overview discusses the diagnostic performance of noninvasive or semi-invasive tests for endometriosis, including panels of known peripheral blood biomarkers, protein/peptide markers discovered by proteomics, miRNA, and endometrial nerve fiber density. Tests with high sensitivity and acceptable specificity have been developed; some have been validated in independent populations and are therefore promising. To make real progress, international agreement on biobank development is needed for standard operating procedures for the collection, treatment, storage, and analysis of tissue samples and for detailed clinical phenotyping of these samples. Furthermore, it is necessary to validate the diagnostic accuracy of any promising test prospectively in an independent symptomatic patient population with subfertility and/or pain without clear ultrasound evidence of endometriosis and with a clinical indication for surgery, divided into cases with laparoscopically and histologically confirmed endometriosis and controls with laparoscopically confirmed absence of endometriosis.
AB - A noninvasive test for endometriosis would be useful for the early detection of endometriosis in symptomatic women who have pelvic pain and/or subfertility with normal ultrasound results. This would include nearly all cases of minimal-to-mild endometriosis, some cases of moderate-to-severe endometriosis without a clearly visible ovarian endometrioma, and cases with pelvic adhesions and/or other pelvic pathology that might benefit from surgery to improve pelvic pain and/or subfertility. This overview discusses the diagnostic performance of noninvasive or semi-invasive tests for endometriosis, including panels of known peripheral blood biomarkers, protein/peptide markers discovered by proteomics, miRNA, and endometrial nerve fiber density. Tests with high sensitivity and acceptable specificity have been developed; some have been validated in independent populations and are therefore promising. To make real progress, international agreement on biobank development is needed for standard operating procedures for the collection, treatment, storage, and analysis of tissue samples and for detailed clinical phenotyping of these samples. Furthermore, it is necessary to validate the diagnostic accuracy of any promising test prospectively in an independent symptomatic patient population with subfertility and/or pain without clear ultrasound evidence of endometriosis and with a clinical indication for surgery, divided into cases with laparoscopically and histologically confirmed endometriosis and controls with laparoscopically confirmed absence of endometriosis.
KW - Biomarker
KW - diagnosis
KW - endometriosis
KW - endometrium
KW - plasma
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84876414926&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.fertnstert.2013.01.097
DO - 10.1016/j.fertnstert.2013.01.097
M3 - Article
C2 - 23414923
AN - SCOPUS:84876414926
SN - 0015-0282
VL - 99
SP - 1135
EP - 1145
JO - Fertility and Sterility
JF - Fertility and Sterility
IS - 4
ER -