# Two-Year Clinical Outcomes of Transvaginal Radiofrequency Ablation for Symptomatic Uterine Fibroids: A Retrospective Observational Study

**Authors:** Mª Eugenia Marín Martínez, Gema Vaquero Argüello, Tirso Pérez Medina, Victoria E. Rey, Mª Luisa de la Cruz Conty, Sara Cruz Melguizo

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/jcm15041518 · 2026-02-14

## TL;DR

This study shows that transvaginal radiofrequency ablation is a safe and effective treatment for uterine fibroids, providing long-term symptom relief and significant fibroid shrinkage.

## Contribution

The study provides two-year clinical outcomes of TRFA, including volume reduction, symptom improvement, and reproductive outcomes.

## Key findings

- TRFA led to a 60.75% mean fibroid volume reduction at 24 months.
- UFS-QoL scores improved significantly, from 30.19 at baseline to 14.97 at 24 months.
- High patient satisfaction (96.61%) and favorable reproductive outcomes were observed.

## Abstract

Background: Transvaginal radiofrequency ablation (TRFA) is a minimally invasive, uterus-preserving technique for symptomatic uterine fibroids. This study evaluates its two-year clinical and volumetric outcomes, safety profile, patient satisfaction, and reintervention rates. Methods: In this single-center, retrospective, single-arm observational cohort study, 121 premenopausal women underwent outpatient TRFA under general anesthesia between 2018 and 2023. Follow-up visits at 1, 6, 12, and 24 months assessed fibroid volume reduction, symptom improvement using the Uterine Fibroid Symptom and Quality of Life Questionnaire (UFS-QoL), vascularity, satisfaction, complications, and the need for reintervention. A total of 169 fibroids were treated. Results: TRFA resulted in progressive fibroid shrinkage, with a mean volume reduction of 57.97% at 6 months and 60.75% at 24 months, accompanied by sustained improvement in UFS-QoL scores (from 30.19 at baseline to 14.97 at 24 months). Patient satisfaction was high (96.61%). Complications were infrequent and predominantly mild, and recovery was rapid, with short postoperative analgesia (mean 2.87 days) and limited sick leave (mean 3.34 days). The two-year reintervention rate was 24.79%, with a substantial proportion corresponding hysteroscopic procedures planned a priori as part of a sequential therapeutic strategy. Among 22 pregnancies recorded after TRFA, 81.82% resulted in term deliveries with favorable neonatal outcomes although fertility was not a predefined study endpoint. Conclusions: TRFA appears to be a safe, effective, and well-tolerated minimally invasive treatment for symptomatic uterine fibroids, offering durable symptom relief and significant volume reduction and rapid recovery, and encouraging reproductive outcomes. Within the limitations of its single-arm observational design, these results support TRFA as a valuable uterus-preserving therapeutic option.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** Fibroid Symptom (MESH:D007889), pelvic infection (MESH:D034161), bleeding (MESH:D006470), bowel perforation (MESH:D057112), pelvic inflammatory disease (MESH:D000292), postpartum (MESH:D006473), reproductive dysfunction (MESH:D060737), ischemia (MESH:D007511), necrosis (MESH:D009336), analgesia (MESH:D000699), injury to (MESH:D014947), Symptom (MESH:D012816), pelvic pain (MESH:D017699), inflammatory syndrome (MESH:D018746), coagulative necrosis (MESH:D001778), dyspareunia (MESH:D004414), thermal (MESH:D020886), postoperative pain (MESH:D010149), malignancy (MESH:D009369), menorrhagia (MESH:D008595), abdominal pain (MESH:D015746), myomas (MESH:D009214), Obstetric (MESH:D048949)
- **Chemicals:** tranexamic acid (MESH:D014148), cefazolin (MESH:D002437), GnRH antagonists (-), dexamethasone (MESH:D003907)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

4 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12942411/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12942411