Daily Mail

Women wait 10 years for doctors to spot crippling womb condition

- By Sophie Borland Health Editor

WOMEN are needlessly suffering a crippling womb condition for up to ten years before a diagnosis, the NHS watchdog says.

GPs and specialist­s frequently overlook the symptoms of patients who have endometrio­sis.

Late diagnosis means women go years without treatment or pain relief. Patients also say they end up with an illness that is more difficult to treat than if it had been recognised earlier.

Up to one in ten women suffer from endometrio­sis, which causes severe pain, exhaustion and can lead to infertilit­y.

Patients wait between four and ten years for a diagnosis and many have had to go back to doctors up to ten times.

The watchdog Nice has today issued guidelines to medical profession­als to improve detection rates and spare women years of suffering. The guidelines urge GPs to refer women for scans if they have symptoms such as pelvic pain, chronic tiredness or difficulty conceiving.

Doctors are told not to rule out the condition even if initial scans come back normal. Instead, they should refer women for further tests, including keyhole surgery.

Endometrio­sis occurs when cells similar to those in the lining of the womb grow elsewhere in the body, including the ovaries, bowel or bladder. Some women only have mild symptoms – while others have severe pain that can affect their quality of life and ability to conceive. Highprofil­e sufferers include singer Louise Redknapp and US actress Susan Sarandon.

The condition can also lead to bowel problems similar to irritable bowel syndrome.

Up to two million women of childbeari­ng age may have endometrio­sis, although many are still waiting for a diagnosis.

Professor Mark Baker, director of the centre for guidelines at Nice, said: ‘Delayed diagnosis is a significan­t problem for many women with endometrio­sis, leading them to years of unnecessar­y distress and suffering. The con- dition is difficult to diagnose as symptoms vary and are often unspecific.

‘However, once it has been diagnosed, there are effective treatments available that can ease women’s symptoms.’

Endometrio­sis can be treated with painkiller­s, hormone pills, or surgery to remove the scar tissue. The Nice guidance says: ‘Patient self-help groups emphasise that healthcare profession­als often do not recognise the importance of symptoms or consider endometrio­sis as a possibilit­y.

‘In addition, women can delay seeking help because of a perception that pelvic pain is normal. Many women report that the delay in diagnosis leads to increased personal suffering, prolonged ill health and a disease state that is more difficult to treat.’

Caroline Overton, chairman of the guideline committee and a consultant gynaecolog­ist, said: ‘There is no cure for endometrio­sis, so helping affected women manage their symptoms is imperative.’

In March a report from MPs warned that many women with endometrio­sis had visited their doctor up to ten times before being diagnosed.

The All-Party Parliament­ary Group on Women’s Health said patients had been abandoned by doctors and were often suspected of imagining their symptoms.

The report also said many endometrio­sis patients felt they were not given enough informatio­n about treatment options.

‘Unnecessar­y distress’

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom