Urogenital prolapse is a frequent and invalidating pathology in women, involving the anterior vaginal wall and the uterus in most cases. Posterior vaginal wall prolapse is present in only 50% of cases. Surgery is an option for women with troublesome prolapse. A woman's lifetime risk of undergoing surgery for pelvic organ prolapse (POP) surgery by the age of 80 is around 19%. Laparoscopic sacrocolpopexy (LS) with synthetic non-absorbable mesh is considered the gold standard, with a composite success rate of 85% at one year (Prospere study). Based on early experience and historical habits, a prerectal mesh was used to be systematically placed in the rectovaginal space, in addition to the anterior and apical mesh placed in the vesicovaginal space, in order to prevent de-novo posterior prolapse (reported rates up to 33%). The benefit of preventive prerectal mesh is questionned on the basis of a single retrospective study comparing 68 LS with double-mesh (anterior \& posterior, DM) to 32 LS with a single anterior mesh (SAM): posterior recurrence rates were respectively 5.9 vs. 31.3% (p\<0,01), and total recurrence rates 16.2 vs. 43.8% (p\<0.01). However, as this difference was not significant in the subgroup of patients without associated cervicocystopexy, the authors concluded that the risk of posterior failure was only due to the cervicocystopexy itself (anti-urinary incontinence procedure which has been abandoned since). On the other hand, a prerectal mesh increases the risk for specific complications: rectal injury (up to 3%), anal pain (up to 25%), mesh exposition (up to 2%). Furthermore the posterior mesh increases the procedure by a minimum of 30 minutes (Robolaps study, unpublished data). The rate of de-novo obstructed defecation after LS with prerectal mesh is reported up to 25%. It could be explained by the mesh itself, but also by nerve injuries during the dissection of the rectovaginal space and rectal stalks.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
DOUBLE
Enrollment
834
laparoscopic sacropexy is only performed with the anterior mes
laparoscopic sacropexy is performed using two synthetic non-absorbable meshes, both sutured to the promontory (Double-Mesh, DM): one mesh is placed in the vesicovaginal space and sutured to the uterine cervix or vaginal apex, and one mesh is placed in the rectovaginal space
Hopital Estaing
Clermont-Ferrand, France
RECRUITINGCh Dunkerque
Dunkirk, France
RECRUITINGHopital Saint-Louis - La Rochelle
La Rochelle, France
RECRUITINGClinique Du Pre
Le Mans, France
RECRUITINGHop Jeanne de Flandre Chu Lille
Lille, France
RECRUITINGHopital Saint Vincent - Saint Antoine
Lille, France
RECRUITINGChu de Nice Hopital de L'Archet
Nice, France
RECRUITINGChu Nimes - Nimes
Nîmes, France
RECRUITINGChi Poissy St Germain Site de Poissy
Poissy, France
RECRUITINGComposite criteria of success at 2 years follow-up
Composite criteria of success at 2 years follow-up: no symptom of vaginal bulge, no prolapse beyond the hymen (\>0 cm), no reintervention for prolapse recurrence. Its advantage is that it considers only recurrences that are symptomatic or needing a reintervention. It is strongly linked with women satisfaction after prolapse surgery.
Time frame: at 2 years after the intervention
Anatomical results
Anatomical results will be based on clinical evaluation of patients at 2 years follow-up using the POP-Q system, with a specific evaluation of posterior vaginal wall with measures of the Bp point
Time frame: at 2 years
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