EndoGuide β€” Non-Invasive Diagnosis & Management
Gynaeguru

Non-Invasive Diagnosisof Endometriosis

An interactive guide for Educational Purpose Only

The Diagnostic Landscape

Endometriosis affects ~10% of women of reproductive age. Historically diagnosed surgically, modern non-invasive methods now offer reliable detection.

10%
Women of reproductive age affected worldwide
7–10
Average years from symptom onset to diagnosis
90%
MRI sensitivity for deep infiltrating endometriosis
3
Core non-invasive diagnostic approaches available today
πŸ”¬
Clinical Evaluation
Skilled clinicians assess symptom clustersβ€”dysmenorrhea, pelvic pain, dyspareuniaβ€”using validated questionnaires and physical examination to establish pre-test probability.
First LineNo Cost
πŸ“‘
Imaging Modalities
Transvaginal ultrasound (TVS) and pelvic MRI provide direct visualisation of endometriomas, deep infiltrating disease, and organ involvement without laparoscopy.
TVSMRI Pelvis80–90% sensitivity
🧬
Biomarkers (Emerging)
Blood-based markers (CA-125, cytokines, microRNAs) and novel menstrual blood genomics are under active investigation as minimally-invasive confirmatory tests.
CA-125MicroRNAEmerging
πŸ€–
AI-Assisted Diagnosis
Machine learning models trained on ultrasound images, MRI data, and symptom patterns are advancing toward real-time, non-surgical endometriosis detection.
Deep LearningClinical AIResearch Phase
Diagnostic Pathway

A stepwise, non-invasive approach guides clinical decision-making before considering laparoscopy.

Step 01 β€” Clinical
Symptom Assessment & History
Comprehensive history focusing on cyclic pain, dysmenorrhea severity, infertility, and bowel/bladder symptoms. Use validated questionnaires (e.g., WERF EPHect, Biberoglu–Behrman scale) to quantify burden.
Step 02 β€” Imaging
Transvaginal Ultrasound (TVS)
First-line imaging. Look for ovarian endometrioma (ground-glass echogenicity), “sliding sign” loss (adhesions), and deep infiltrating nodules at rectovaginal septum.
Step 03 β€” Advanced Imaging
MRI Pelvis (if indicated)
Reserved for deep infiltrating disease, bowel/bladder involvement, pre-surgical mapping, or equivocal ultrasound. Sensitivity 80–90% for deep disease.
Step 04 β€” Biomarkers
Laboratory & Molecular Tests
CA-125, cytokine panels, or emerging genomic tests may add specificity. Currently adjunctive; not sufficient alone for diagnosis.
Step 05 β€” Surgical (Last Resort)
Diagnostic Laparoscopy
Still the gold standard for peritoneal disease confirmation. Reserved for failed non-invasive workup, therapeutic intent, or fertility surgery. Increasingly less necessary.
Symptom Checker

Complete the clinical context fields first, then select all presenting symptoms. Cross-field validation will flag clinically inconsistent combinations. This tool provides an indicative suspicion scoreβ€”not a diagnosis.

🩺 Clinical Context (required for validation)
Select the patient’s current menstrual status and hormonal therapy. These are cross-validated against selected symptoms to flag clinically inconsistent inputs.
⚠️ Clinically Inconsistent Inputs Detected
    Please review the flagged combinations before proceeding. Contradicting fields may produce unreliable suspicion scores.
    0%
    SUSPICION
    Key Symptom Profiles
    Dysmenorrhea
    Cyclical pelvic pain beginning before or at menstruation onset. Endometriosis-associated dysmenorrhea is often disproportionately severe, progressive, and poorly responsive to OTC NSAIDs.
    Specificity for Endometriosis~55%
    Chronic Pelvic Pain
    Non-cyclic pain persisting β‰₯6 months. Found in ~70–90% of women with confirmed endometriosis. May involve referred leg/back pain due to infiltrating lesions.
    Prevalence in Endometriosis~80%
    Dyspareunia
    Deep dyspareunia (pain on deep penetration) strongly suggests rectovaginal or uterosacral involvement. Superficial dyspareunia may indicate vulvodynia overlap.
    Predictive Value~65%
    Infertility
    Endometriosis found in 20–50% of infertile women. Mechanisms include tubal distortion, peritoneal fluid toxicity, impaired implantation, and immune dysregulation.
    Prevalence in Infertile Women~35%
    Imaging Modalities

    Non-invasive imaging is the cornerstone of modern endometriosis workup. The choice of modality depends on clinical suspicion, disease extent, and pre-surgical need.

    First Line
    Transvaginal Ultrasound
    AbbreviationTVS / TVUS
    Sensitivity (endometrioma)~90%
    Deep DIE detectionModerate
    CostLow
    RadiationNone
    Key findingGround-glass cyst
    Widely AvailableReal-TimeDynamic Assessment
    Advanced Imaging
    MRI Pelvis
    AbbreviationMRI
    Sensitivity (deep DIE)80–90%
    Bowel involvementExcellent
    CostHigh
    RadiationNone
    Key usePre-surgical mapping
    Soft-tissue detailMulti-compartmentBladder/Bowel
    Specialised
    Rectal Water-Contrast US
    AbbreviationRWC-TVS
    Bowel DIE sensitivity~87%
    AvailabilitySpecialist centres
    CostModerate
    RadiationNone
    Best forRectal involvement
    Bowel mappingPre-op planning
    Emerging
    Elastography / CEUS
    Modality typeUS-enhanced
    Evidence levelPreliminary
    Fibrosis detectionGood
    CostVariable
    StatusResearch phase
    ResearchAdjunctive
    πŸ“‘
    TVS β€” Detailed Findings & Technique
    β–Ύ

    Transvaginal ultrasound is the recommended first-line imaging for suspected endometriosis per ESHRE guidelines. A structured systematic scanning protocol improves diagnostic yield significantly.


    Systematic Scanning Protocol (IDEA Consensus):
    • Step 1: Assess uterus β€” retroversion, mobility, adenomyosis features
    • Step 2: Ovaries β€” look for endometrioma (ground-glass echogenicity, no papillary projections)
    • Step 3: Sliding sign β€” gentle probe pressure assesses posterior compartment mobility
    • Step 4: Deep nodules β€” rectovaginal septum, posterior fornix, uterosacral ligaments
    • Step 5: Anterior compartment β€” bladder serosa, pouch of Douglas

    ADVANTAGES
    • βœ“ Widely available, affordable
    • βœ“ No ionising radiation
    • βœ“ Real-time dynamic assessment
    • βœ“ Operator-patient interaction
    LIMITATIONS
    • βœ— Poor for superficial peritoneal disease
    • βœ— Operator dependent
    • βœ— Limited field of view for bowel
    • βœ— Discomfort for some patients
    🧲
    MRI Pelvis β€” Protocols & Clinical Indications
    β–Ύ

    MRI provides superior soft-tissue contrast resolution and is particularly valuable for mapping complex pelvic disease before major surgery.


    Optimal MRI Protocol:
    • 3T field strength preferred over 1.5T
    • T2-weighted sequences (axial, sagittal, coronal)
    • Fat-suppressed T1 to detect haemorrhage (endometrioma)
    • Rectal gel and vaginal contrast improve rectovaginal visualisation
    • DWI (diffusion-weighted imaging) adds specificity for nodules

    Key Detectable Lesions:
    πŸ”΅ Ovarian endometrioma
    πŸ”΅ Rectovaginal nodule
    πŸ”΅ Uterosacral ligament
    πŸ”΅ Bladder endometriosis
    πŸ”΅ Sigmoid / rectal DIE
    πŸ”΅ Ureteral involvement
    Biomarker-Based Diagnosis

    The search for a reliable blood or urine test for endometriosis is one of the most active areas in gynaecological research. Current evidence and emerging technologies are outlined below.

    🩸
    CA-125 β€” The Most Studied Marker
    Cancer Antigen 125 | Serum glycoprotein
    CA-125 is the most widely used blood biomarker for endometriosis surveillance. Elevated in moderate-to-severe disease but lacks sensitivity and specificity for early stages. Normal CA-125 does not exclude endometriosis.
    ~50%
    Sensitivity (overall)
    ~85%
    Specificity
    35 U/mL
    Standard cut-off
    Stage III–IV
    Best performance
    Biomarker Landscape Overview
    BiomarkerSourceStatusSensitivityNotes
    CA-125BloodClinical use~50%Best for moderate-severe disease; poor for stage I–II
    IL-6 / IL-8Blood / Peritoneal fluidResearch~70%Inflammatory cytokines elevated in endo microenvironment
    MicroRNA panelBlood / Menstrual bloodResearch~80%*miR-200a, miR-141 show promise; validation ongoing
    cfDNABloodEmergingTBDCirculating cell-free DNA methylation patterns under study
    Lactate / MetabolomicsUrine / BloodEmergingTBDMetabolic signature differences in menstrual fluid
    Genomic endometrial testMenstrual bloodCommercial (limited)~70%*Endosign, Dot Score β€” early commercial diagnostic tests
    Annexin A5BloodResearch~65%Anti-apoptotic protein elevated in endometriosis
    VEGFPeritoneal fluidResearch~60%Angiogenic marker; elevated in endometriotic lesions
    *Sensitivity estimates from small validation cohorts; not yet confirmed in large prospective trials.
    Non-Invasive Treatment

    Medical management is the first-line approach for most patients with endometriosis. Hormonal and non-hormonal strategies target pain, disease activity, and quality of life.

    πŸ’Š
    Combined Oral Contraceptive Pills (COCP)
    β–Ύ

    COCPs are the most widely prescribed first-line hormonal therapy. Continuous use (without pill-free intervals) suppresses menstruation and reduces ectopic implant stimulation.


    Benefits
    • βœ“ Effective dysmenorrhea relief
    • βœ“ Reduces disease progression
    • βœ“ Inexpensive, widely available
    • βœ“ Dual contraceptive benefit
    Limitations
    • βœ— Not for women seeking pregnancy
    • βœ— VTE risk in susceptible patients
    • βœ— Breakthrough bleeding common
    Estrogen + ProgestogenContinuous use preferredFirst-line
    πŸŒ€
    Progestins β€” Dienogest, MPA, Norethisterone
    β–Ύ

    Progestins are highly effective for pain control and disease suppression. They act directly on endometriotic lesions causing decidualisation and eventual atrophy.


    Common Agents:
    Dienogest 2mg
    Most evidence; approved for endometriosis
    Medroxyprogesterone 150mg IM
    Depot form; 3-monthly injection
    Norethisterone 5mg
    Oral; widely available, low cost
    LNG-IUS (Mirena)
    Local progestin; 5-year duration
    βš—οΈ
    GnRH Analogues β€” Leuprolide, Goserelin
    β–Ύ

    GnRH agonist analogues cause medical castration via pituitary downregulation, creating a hypo-estrogenic state equivalent to temporary menopause. Highly effective for severe pain.


    ⚠️ IMPORTANT: Add-Back Therapy Required
    Low-dose estrogen-progestogen add-back (e.g., norethisterone 5mg + estradiol 2mg) must be co-prescribed to prevent bone mineral density loss and reduce menopausal symptoms while maintaining therapeutic effect.
    Leuprolide
    3.75mg IM monthly or 11.25mg every 3 months
    Goserelin
    3.6mg SC monthly or 10.8mg every 3 months
    Maximum duration: typically 6 months without add-back; extended use requires add-back therapy and DEXA monitoring.
    πŸ†•
    GnRH Antagonists β€” Elagolix, Relugolix
    β–Ύ

    GnRH antagonists offer dose-titratable estrogen suppression without the initial flare seen with agonists. Oral administration is a significant advantage over injectable GnRH agonists.


    Elagolix (Orilissa)
    • β€’ 150mg daily (partial suppression)
    • β€’ 200mg BD (full suppression)
    • β€’ FDA approved for endometriosis
    Relugolix combo
    • β€’ Fixed combination with E2/NETA
    • β€’ Once daily oral tablet
    • β€’ Under regulatory review for endo
    Oral once-dailyRapid onsetTitratable suppressionNo initial flare
    πŸ’Š
    NSAIDs & Non-Hormonal Pain Management
    β–Ύ

    NSAIDs remain first-line symptomatic therapy, particularly for dysmenorrhea. They inhibit cyclooxygenase enzymes, reducing prostaglandin-mediated uterine cramping and inflammation.


    πŸ”΄
    Ibuprofen
    400–600mg TDS with food
    🟠
    Naproxen
    500mg BD; longer half-life
    🟑
    Mefenamic Acid
    500mg TDS; anti-prostaglandin
    πŸ”΅
    Celecoxib
    COX-2 selective; GI-sparing
    Tip: Pre-emptive NSAID use (starting 1–2 days before expected menstruation) is more effective than reactive dosing. Combine with proton pump inhibitor for GI protection in long-term users.
    🌿
    Lifestyle, Diet & Complementary Therapies
    β–Ύ
    πŸ₯— Anti-Inflammatory Diet
    • ↑ Omega-3 (oily fish, flaxseed)
    • ↑ Fruits & vegetables
    • ↑ Whole grains, legumes
    • ↓ Red & processed meat
    • ↓ Trans fats, refined sugar
    • ↓ Alcohol, caffeine
    πŸƒ Physiotherapy
    • Pelvic floor rehab
    • Manual therapy
    • Myofascial release
    • Breathing techniques
    • Posture correction
    🧘 Mind-Body
    • Yoga (evidence grade B)
    • Acupuncture
    • CBT for pain
    • Mindfulness-based stress reduction
    • Heat therapy
    AI-Assisted Diagnosis & Future Therapies

    Machine learning is poised to transform endometriosis diagnosis. Meanwhile, novel therapeutic targets are advancing through clinical trials.

    Interactive AI Assistant β€” Ask About Endometriosis
    πŸ”¬
    EndoGuide AI
    Powered by Clinical AI Β· For Education Only
    Hello! I’m EndoGuide AI. I can answer questions about non-invasive endometriosis diagnosis and treatment. What would you like to know?
    ⚠️ Educational only. Not a substitute for clinical judgment or professional medical advice.
    🧠
    Machine Learning on Ultrasound
    Convolutional neural networks trained on TVS images can detect endometriomas and deep infiltrating lesions with sensitivity approaching expert-level performance (~88–92% in validation studies).
    CNN modelsImage recognition
    πŸ“Š
    Symptom Pattern Recognition
    NLP algorithms applied to electronic health records identify high-suspicion symptom clusters years before formal diagnosis, potentially closing the diagnostic delay gap.
    NLPEHR mining
    πŸ”—
    Multimodal AI Fusion
    Next-generation systems combine imaging, biomarker profiles, and clinical symptoms into unified diagnostic scoresβ€”aiming for >95% accuracy without laparoscopy.
    MultimodalResearch phase
    Future Non-Invasive Treatments
    🧬 Immunotherapy β€” IL-33 / IL-1Ξ² pathway targeting
    🩸 Anti-angiogenic agents β€” Bevacizumab analogs
    πŸ”¬ MicroRNA therapeutics β€” miR-200 family
    βš—οΈ Selective PR modulators β€” SPRM research
    🧫 Stem cell therapy β€” endometrial regeneration
    πŸ’‰ mTOR pathway inhibitors
    🌿 Resveratrol β€” antioxidant clinical trials
    πŸ”΅ CXCR4 antagonists β€” lesion homing disruption
    🟣 Epigenetic modifiers β€” HDAC inhibitors
    🀍 CAR-T cell therapy β€” experimental
    ⚠️
    When Surgery Remains Necessary
    Despite advances in non-invasive approaches, laparoscopic surgery is still indicated in selected cases. Minimally invasive laparoscopic excision (not ablation) is the gold standard surgical approach.
    Severe infertilityLarge endometriomas (>4cm)Bowel obstructionUreteral obstructionFailed medical therapyDiagnostic uncertainty
    EndoGuide β€” Non-Invasive Endometriosis Diagnosis & Management
    For educational and clinical reference purposes only. Based on ESHRE 2022 guidelines, ASRM recommendations, and peer-reviewed literature.
    This tool does not constitute medical advice. Always refer to current clinical guidelines and specialist opinion.