Power morcellation in laparoscopic surgery enables specialists to carry out minimally invasive procedures such as hysterectomies and myomectomies by cutting specimens into smaller pieces using a rotating blade and removing pieces through a laparoscope. Unexpected uterine sarcoma treated by surgery involving tumor disruption could be associated with poor prognosis. The current study aims to shed light on power morcellation from a medicolegal perspective: the procedure has resulted in adverse outcomes and litigation, and compensation for plaintiffs, as published in various journals cited in PubMed and MEDLINE, Cochrane Library, EMBASE, and GyneWeb. Considering the claims after the US Food and Drug Administration warnings on morcellation, the current study broadens the scope of research by including search engines, legal databases, and court filings (DeJure, Lexis Nexis, Justia, superior court of New Jersey, and US district court of Minnesota) between 1995 and 2019. Legal records show that courts determine professional responsibility regarding complications, making it essential to document adherence to safety protocols and specific guidelines, when available. Sound medical practices and clearly stated institute best practices result in better patient outcomes and are important when unfavorable clinical outcomes occur; adverse legal decisions can be avoided if there are grounds to prove professional conformity with specific guidelines and the unpredictability of an event.

Medicolegal issues in power morcellation: cautionary rules for gynecologists to avoid unfavorable outcomes / Zaami, Simona; Zupi, Errico; Lazzeri, Lucia; Stark, Michael; Malvasi, Antonio; Signore, Fabrizio; Marinelli, Enrico. - In: JOURNAL OF MINIMALLY INVASIVE GYNECOLOGY. - ISSN 1553-4650. - 27:3(2020), pp. 583-592. [10.1016/j.jmig.2019.04.031]

Medicolegal issues in power morcellation: cautionary rules for gynecologists to avoid unfavorable outcomes

Zaami, Simona
Primo
;
Marinelli, Enrico
Ultimo
2020

Abstract

Power morcellation in laparoscopic surgery enables specialists to carry out minimally invasive procedures such as hysterectomies and myomectomies by cutting specimens into smaller pieces using a rotating blade and removing pieces through a laparoscope. Unexpected uterine sarcoma treated by surgery involving tumor disruption could be associated with poor prognosis. The current study aims to shed light on power morcellation from a medicolegal perspective: the procedure has resulted in adverse outcomes and litigation, and compensation for plaintiffs, as published in various journals cited in PubMed and MEDLINE, Cochrane Library, EMBASE, and GyneWeb. Considering the claims after the US Food and Drug Administration warnings on morcellation, the current study broadens the scope of research by including search engines, legal databases, and court filings (DeJure, Lexis Nexis, Justia, superior court of New Jersey, and US district court of Minnesota) between 1995 and 2019. Legal records show that courts determine professional responsibility regarding complications, making it essential to document adherence to safety protocols and specific guidelines, when available. Sound medical practices and clearly stated institute best practices result in better patient outcomes and are important when unfavorable clinical outcomes occur; adverse legal decisions can be avoided if there are grounds to prove professional conformity with specific guidelines and the unpredictability of an event.
2020
lawsuit; leiomyosarcoma; liability; malignancies; female; gynecology; history, 20th century; history; 21st century; humans; hysterectomy; jurisprudence; laparoscopy; morcellation; physician-patient relations; practice patterns; physicians'; prognosis; sarcoma; treatment outcome; united states; united states food and drug administration; uterine myomectomy; uterine neoplasms; liability; legal
01 Pubblicazione su rivista::01a Articolo in rivista
Medicolegal issues in power morcellation: cautionary rules for gynecologists to avoid unfavorable outcomes / Zaami, Simona; Zupi, Errico; Lazzeri, Lucia; Stark, Michael; Malvasi, Antonio; Signore, Fabrizio; Marinelli, Enrico. - In: JOURNAL OF MINIMALLY INVASIVE GYNECOLOGY. - ISSN 1553-4650. - 27:3(2020), pp. 583-592. [10.1016/j.jmig.2019.04.031]
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11573/1477235
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