Endometriosis-Related Pelvic Pain
Investigational adjunctive use for chronic endometriosis-related pelvic pain; very limited evidence. Not a substitute for hormonal or surgical management.
Patient Summary
- Is this FDA-cleared for this use?
- Not FDA-cleared for endometriosis. FDA cleared medicinal leeches only for venous congestion in microsurgical reconstruction (K040187, 2004). Use here is investigational.
- What evidence exists?
- Tier C (investigational). One small uncontrolled case series describes pain VAS improvement; there are no randomized controlled trials. Evidence-based management per ESHRE / ACOG includes hormonal therapy (combined oral contraceptives, progestin-only pills, IUS, GnRH agonists or antagonists with add-back), laparoscopic excision of endometriotic implants (gold standard for definitive diagnosis and refractory pain), and multimodal pain management including NSAIDs, pelvic floor physical therapy, and (where indicated) cognitive behavioral therapy or specialty pelvic pain referral.
- Main risks
- Bleeding from bite sites for 6 to 24 hours after detachment
- Bruising and tenderness over the lower abdomen, sacrum, or inner thigh for 5 to 10 days
- Local skin infection or, rarely, Aeromonas infection
- Allergic reaction to leech saliva (uncommon)
- Temporary worsening of pelvic pain for 1 to 3 days
- Small permanent scars at bite sites
- Delay or replacement of hormonal therapy or laparoscopic excision
- Risk of misdiagnosis of new or worsening pathology (rupture, ovarian torsion, ectopic pregnancy)
- Who should not consider this
- Patients who are pregnant or attempting conception
- Patients with active pelvic infection (PID, tubo-ovarian abscess)
- Patients without a confirmed diagnosis (definitive diagnosis is laparoscopic visualization)
- Patients on anticoagulants, with hemophilia, or with severe anemia
- Patients who have not tried evidence-based hormonal therapy
- Patients with severe disease (DIE — deep infiltrating endometriosis) requiring surgical management
- What to ask your clinician
- Has my diagnosis been confirmed (laparoscopic visualization is the gold standard)?
- Have I tried evidence-based hormonal therapy (COC, progestin-only, IUS, GnRH agonist or antagonist)?
- Am I a candidate for laparoscopic excision by a specialist (excision is superior to ablation for deep disease)?
- Have I had pelvic floor physical therapy?
- Where exactly will leeches be placed — NEVER intravaginally?
- How does this fit with my fertility goals?
- What is the practitioner's experience and Aeromonas-prevention plan?
- When to seek urgent care
- Sudden severe pelvic pain with nausea, vomiting, fever, or fainting (possible ovarian torsion, ruptured cyst, or ectopic pregnancy — call 911 or go to ER)
- Heavy vaginal bleeding with positive pregnancy test (possible ectopic — emergency)
- Severe pelvic pain with high fever and chills (possible PID or tubo-ovarian abscess)
- Bleeding from a bite site lasting more than 24 to 48 hours
- Fever above 38.0 C / 100.4 F or chills
- Spreading redness, warmth, pus, or red streaks (cellulitis)
- Hives, throat tightness, or breathing difficulty
What this does NOT mean
- This is not FDA-cleared for endometriosis.
- A single small case series does NOT establish efficacy versus hormonal therapy or laparoscopic excision.
- Mechanism rationale (pelvic inflammation modulation) does NOT eliminate endometriotic implants.
- Leech therapy is NEVER intravaginal — that placement is contraindicated.
- Leech therapy is not a substitute for hormonal therapy, laparoscopic excision, or pelvic floor physical therapy when indicated.
Safety cross-references
Clinical Profile
- Category
- gynecologic
- ICD-10
- N80.0, N80.1, N80.2, N80.3, N80.9
- Safety tier
- medium
Evidence Summary
No controlled clinical trial or published case series of leech therapy for endometriosis-related chronic pelvic pain exists; any use is investigational and mechanistic only. Where attempted, leeches are placed at the sacrum, lower abdomen, and inner thigh — NEVER intravaginally. A proposed mechanism involves modulation of pelvic inflammation and central pain sensitization, but this is speculative and unproven. Hormonal management (combined oral contraceptives, GnRH analogs, progestins) and definitive laparoscopic excision remain primary. Leech therapy would be adjunctive and exploratory only.
Treatment specifics
How many leeches, where they are placed, how long a session lasts, and whether to repeat are clinical decisions made by a qualified provider under institutional protocol — not something to self-administer. Discuss the specifics with a clinician experienced in medicinal leech therapy. (Clinicians: switch the audience selector in the top bar to “Clinician” to view protocol detail.)
Key Trials
- Bahmani M et al. (2017), n=18
Contraindications
- Active anticoagulant therapy (warfarin INR >2.0, DOACs, heparin)
- Hemophilia or other bleeding disorder
- Severe anemia (Hb <10 g/dL)
- Active bacteremia or sepsis
- Known hypersensitivity to leech salivary proteins
- Pregnancy (relative — first/third trimester)
- Immunocompromised state with severe neutropenia
- Active pelvic infection
- Pregnancy or attempting conception
- Suspected endometrial malignancy
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