Ok ladies, I've been battling endo since I was diagnosed in 1981. I've done them all. I did the hormones that were really testesterone, I've done Lupron. I've had two laparoscopies, and a laparotomy. I've managed to avoid a hysterectomy.
Back in 1984, my doctor simply did not want to do the big H on such a young woman. But the pain from my periods was just too intense. I did the hormone therapy above, but we kind of knew that it would only last a matter of months before the pain came back. (I have adhesions on my bowels, we're talking pain.)
Anyway, my doctor said "why don't you just go on birth control pills and don't stop; don't get a period." The point of Lupron and Danocrine is to supress your period. So we tried it with bcps. I supressed my cycle for 9 years, then I tried a break from the pill. I went three months off completely, then back on in the normal fashion. In less than a year, my periods went from normal to double-dose of percocet. Back to supression.
Surprisingly, I was able to get pregnant without too much difficulty (if you don't count two surgeries and two rounds of Lupron as difficult, lol.)
After I had my daughter, my doctor (a different one by now) and I decided to supress again. My periods were ok, but we knew that it was only a matter of time, and then where did we go. Recently, she said to me that I was the last person she thought might get through menopause intact, but it looked like I was heading that way.
So I'm saying that there are less invasive options. I've done Lupron, twice, and I'll never go that route again. It takes away your estrogen, and estrogen is what makes us 'nice'. I was lucky I had any friends left after that. A friend also was on it, and she lost a valued employee when they'd heard she'd be going on Lupron again. For both of us, it was personality altering. For her, she had the added benefit of horrendous hot flashes.
Anyway, for anyone suffering from endo, I'd talk to your doc about supression. That's all that Lupron or pregnancy do that makes it work, supress your cycle. And if you pain is exclusive to your period or ovulation, it goes away. Sometimes, I think that I was one of the women that helped doctors create Seasonale!