European Urology

European Urology

Volume 56, issue 1, pages 1-236, July 2009

Female Urology - Incontinence

The Clinical Effectiveness of Retropubic (IVS-02) and Transobturator (IVS-04) Midurethral Slings: Randomized Trial eulogo1

Tomasz Rechberger, Konrad Futyma, Katarzyna Jankiewicz, Aneta Adamiak, Paweł Skorupski.

Accepted 26 February 2009, Published online 7 May 2009, pages 24 - 30


Abstract

Background

Few series comparing the clinical efficacy of retropubic slings versus transobturator slings for the treatment of female stress urinary incontinence (SUI) are available.

Objective

To compare clinical efficacy of retropubic tape operations and transobturator suburethral tape operations for the surgical treatment of female SUI.

Design, setting, and participants

From January 2003 to December 2005, 611 patients underwent clinical and urodynamic evaluation before surgical treatment for SUI. Patients with advanced urogenital prolapse (pelvic organ prolapse-quantification scale [POP-Q] scale grade >1) were excluded, and 537 patients were included in this study. After 18 mo, 398 women were available for follow-up efficacy evaluation at a tertiary academic center.

Intervention

All patients underwent either a retropubic sling procedure or a transobturator sling procedure. Patients were randomly allocated into two study groups at a ratio of 1:1.

Measurements

After 18 mo all enrolled patients were clinically checked for clinical efficacy of both procedures.

Results and limitations

Demographic and urodynamic parameters of patients were similar in both groups. No bladder injury occurred in the transobturator sling group (IVS-04), whereas 13 intraoperational bladder perforations (6.5%) occurred in the retropubic sling group (IVS-02) (p < 0.001). The tape erosion rate was <2.5% in both groups (p = 0.7). After 18 mo, 398 patients (201 in the IVS-02 group and 197 in the IVS-04 group) were evaluated in terms of clinical efficacy of the procedures. We found out that there was no statistically significant difference in clinical efficacy between these two procedures (χ2 = 1.88, p = 0.39). In the IVS-02 group, 75.1% of patients (n = 151) remained dry (cured), 16.9% of patients (n = 34) reported significant improvement, and 8.0% of patients (n = 16) were considered as failures. In the IVS-04 group, 74.1% of patients (n = 146) remained dry, 14.2% of patients (n = 28) reported significant improvement, and 11.7% (n = 23) were considered as failures.

Conclusions

Based on an 18-mo follow-up, the efficacies of both techniques are comparable; however, the retropubic route appears to be more efficient in the intrinsic sphincter deficiency (ISD) group.

Take Home Message

The transobturator route for the treatment of genuine stress incontinence appears to be as effective as the retropubic route, with 18 mo of follow-up; however, intrinsic sphincter deficiency (ISD) might be an indication for retropubic placement of midurethral sling.

Keywords: Incontinence surgery, Retropubic route, Stress urinary incontinence, Transobturator route.


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