Evidence-Based Guideline on Laparoscopy in Pregnancy
Laparoscopy in pregnancy, Appendicitis in pregnancy, Gallbladder disease / Cholecystitis in pregnancy, Benign adnexal tumours / Ovarian cysts in pregnancy.
Published online: Jan 24 2020
Abstract
Laparoscopy is widely utilised to diagnose and treat acute and chronic, gynaecological and general surgical conditions. It has only been in recent years that laparoscopy has become an acceptable surgical alternative to open surgery in pregnancy. To date there is little clinical guidance pertaining to laparoscopic surgery in pregnancy. This is why the BSGE commissioned this guideline. MEDLINE, EMBASE, CINAHL and the Cochrane library were searched up to February 2017 and evidence was collated and graded following the NICE-approved process. The conditions included in this guideline are laparoscopic management of acute appendicitis, acute gall bladder disease and symptomatic benign adnexal tumours in pregnancy.
The intended audience for this guideline is obstetricians and gynaecologists in secondary and tertiary care, general surgeons and anaesthetists. However, only laparoscopists who have adequate laparoscopic skills and who perform complex laparoscopic surgery regularly should undertake laparoscopy in pregnant women, since much of the evidence stems from specialised centres.
Erratum (in authors)
The name of the tenth author was spelled incorrectly. The correct name is R Dodia.
One author was missing and has been added: L Gokhale.
Original article: Facts Views Vis ObGyn. 2019; 11(1): 5-25
Download the corrected full article here: http://fvvo.be/assets/802/FVVinObGyn-11-5-r1.pdf