The investigators aimed to evaluate outcomes of transobturator urethral sling placement using autologous rectus fascia for female stress urinary incontinence at perioperatively and at 2-year follow-up.
Stress urinary incontinence (SUI) is very common condition in middle-aged women, and can affect quality of life. Some clinical trials reported that the lifetime risk of a woman undergoing surgery for SUI is increase in up to 15%. The midurethral synthetic sling is the most common surgery performed for female SUI. This procedure has high efficacy and low perioperative morbidity. Although many clinical trials have demonstrated that synthetic mid-urethral slings are safe, effective and recommended by several guidelines (e.g. Society of Urodynamics, Female Pelvic Medicine and Urogenital Reconstruction/American Urogynecologic Society and American Urologic Association), the safety and efficacy of surgery for SUI using mesh devices has been questioned by a community of patients and clinicians. After Food and Drug Administration notification on mesh use in pelvic surgery, many patients and providers begin to search of different surgery without synthetic mesh alternatives in SUI. Recently, female patients in England formed the campaign group "Sling the Mesh" to protest the synthetic mesh. Several options such as the autologous pubovaginal sling, biologic grafts, or urethral bulking agent injection have some problems related to morbidity or efficacy. The autologous pubovaginal urethral sling is associated with a higher risk of postoperative voiding dysfunction. The investigators aimed to demonstrate the feasibility of an autologous transobturator urethral sling to avoid the related problems of synthetic mesh placement and the increased rate of voiding dysfunction with pubovaginal sling placement.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
35
Mid-urethral sling placement using autologous rectus fascia
Mid-urethral sling placement using synthetic mesh
ICIQ-SF
The ICIQ-UI Short Form is a brief and psychometrically robust patient-completed questionnaire for evaluating the frequency, severity and impact on quality of life (QoL) of urinary incontinence in women in research and clinical practice across the world. It is scored on a scale from 0-21; higher values represent worse outcomes. The ICIQ-UI Short Form provides a brief and robust measure to assess the impact of symptoms of incontinence on outcome.
Time frame: 2 years
Treatment Benefit Scale
TBS consists of four categories scored as 1 (greatly improved) or 2 (improved), considered as ''yes,'' or 3 (not changed) or 4 (worsened), which were considered as ''no''
Time frame: 2 years
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