The Tohoku Journal of Experimental Medicine
Online ISSN : 1349-3329
Print ISSN : 0040-8727
ISSN-L : 0040-8727
Regular Contribution
The Natural History of Spontaneously Occurred Endometriosis in Cynomolgus Monkeys by Monthly Follow-Up Laparoscopy for Two Years
Kaori HayashiMisako NakayamaChizuru IwataniHideaki TsuchiyaShinichiro NakamuraKosuke NonoguchiYasushi ItohShunichiro TsujiHirohito IshigakiTakahide MoriTakashi MurakamiKazumasa Ogasawara
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2020 Volume 251 Issue 4 Pages 241-253

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Abstract

Endometriosis, a disease in which endometrial tissue proliferates outside the uterus, is a progressive disease that affects women in reproductive age. It causes abdominal pain and infertility that severely affects the quality of life in young women. The mechanism of the onset and development of endometriosis has not been fully elucidated because of the complex mechanism involved in the disease. Nonhuman primates have been used to study the pathogenesis of spontaneous endometriosis because of their gynecological and anatomical similarities to humans. To reveal the natural history of endometriosis in cynomolgus monkeys, we selected 11 female cynomolgus monkeys with spontaneous endometriosis and performed monthly laparoscopies, mapping endometriotic lesions and adhesions up to two years. At the initial laparoscopy, endometriotic lesions were exclusively found in the vesicouterine pouch in 45.4% (5/11) of the monkeys and spread to the Douglas’ pouch over time. Appearance of small de novo lesions and disappearance of some of the small lesions were observed in 100% (11/11) and 18.2% (2/11) of the monkeys, respectively. Endometriosis developed in all monkeys, and the speed of progression varied greatly among individuals that could be attributed to the degree or frequency of retrograde menstruation and genetic factors; these findings support the similarities between humans and monkeys, thus verifying the value of this nonhuman primate model. Finding reliable quantification markers and unravelling the underlying factors in correlation with the spatiotemporal development of the disease using a nonhuman primate model would be useful for the better management of endometriosis in humans.

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© 2020 Tohoku University Medical Press

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