Abstract

Background: Research evidence published 10 to 15 years ago has shown that the type of vasectomy surgical technique performed can influence the effectiveness and the safety of the procedure. The objective of this study was to determine if evidence-based vasectomy surgical techniques are integrated in the vasectomy programs of selected low-resource countries. Methods: The surgical techniques recommended to perform the two steps of the vasectomy procedure (isolation/exposition and occlusion of the vas deferens) were extracted from current evidence-based clinical practice guidelines. Documents describing male sterilisation standards and practice from Kenya, Rwanda, India, Nepal, Mexico, Honduras, Colombia and Haiti were reviewed to assess adequacy with international guideline recommendations. Results: Best recommended techniques are 1) a minimally invasive technique including the no-scalpel technique (known as the no-scalpel vasectomy (NSV)) to isolate and expose the vas deferens, and 2) cautery of the mucosa of the vas preferably combined with interposition of the fascia (FI) to occlude the vas deferens. The NSV is largely adopted and performed to isolate the vas in selected low-resources countries. Ligation and excision (LE) of a small segment of the vas deferens combined with FI is the most common vas occlusion technique mentioned in the country standards. Cautery as recommended in the guidelines is seldom used in selected countries. Conclusions: Effective and adapted vasectomy vas occlusion techniques are available, but are still underused in many low-resource countries. Providing the most effective vasectomy surgical techniques increases users' confidence and satisfaction regarding male sterilization and may lead to higher acceptability and uptake.

Highlights

  • Vasectomy is generally regarded as a simple, safe, very effective, and highly cost-effective contraceptive method

  • The objectives of this study were to determine 1) what vasectomy surgical techniques are recommended in evidence-based practice guidelines to reduce surgical complications and to maximize occlusion and contraceptive effectiveness, and 2) if these techniques are integrated in the vasectomy norms and standards, and current practice of targeted low-resource countries

  • The assessment of the evidence and the strength of the recommendations vary across the four guidelines, they all agree that a minimally invasive (MIV) technique including the no-scalpel technique (known as the no-scalpel vasectomy (NSV)) should be perform to isolate and expose the vas deferens

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Summary

Introduction

Vasectomy is generally regarded as a simple, safe, very effective, and highly cost-effective contraceptive method. The surgical techniques recommended and/or commonly performed to isolate/expose (classic technique with a scalpel, NSV) and to occlude the vas (simple LE, LE+FI, cautery) in the selected countries were extracted from the retrieved documents. Research evidence published 10 to 15 years ago has shown that the type of vasectomy surgical technique performed can influence the effectiveness and the safety of the procedure. The objective of this study was to determine if evidence-based vasectomy surgical techniques are integrated in the vasectomy programs of selected low-resource countries. Methods: The surgical techniques recommended to perform the two steps of the vasectomy procedure (isolation/exposition and occlusion of the vas deferens) were extracted from current evidence-based clinical practice guidelines. The NSV is largely adopted and performed to isolate the vas in selected low-resources countries. Conclusions: Effective and adapted vasectomy vas occlusion techniques are available, but are still underused in many low-resource countries. Providing the most effective vasectomy surgical techniques increases users’ confidence and satisfaction regarding male sterilization and may lead to higher acceptability and uptake

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