RESUMO
OBJECTIVE: To determine whether vestibulectomy is an effective long-term treatment and investigate the levels of patient satisfaction in women with localized provoked vulvodynia, and to provide long-term follow-up data from a cohort of women whose short-term success rates have been published previously. STUDY DESIGN: A retrospective case note review of 110 women with localized provoked vulvodynia and follow-up patient questionnaire. Patients were asked to quantify their pain scores before surgery, at 2 months after surgery and 1 year after surgery and score their satisfaction levels. RESULTS: Mean pain scores continued to improve throughout the first postoperative year. The mean score was 9.17 preoperatively, 5.24 at 2 months after surgery and 2.48 at 1 year after surgery. Eighty-three percent of patients would recommend the procedure as effective treatment of localized provoked vulvodynia. The overall mean satisfaction score was 7.96, and long-term success appears to be reflected by short-term results. CONCLUSION: Vestibulectomy is an effective long-term treatment for women with provoked localized vulvodynia; the procedure is associated with high levels of patient satisfaction and low complication rates. Shortterm success appears to be a good indicator of long-term improvement, and improve- ment continues throughout the first postoperative year.