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Efficacy of Transvaginal Repair for Rectocele

C

Consorci Sanitari de Terrassa

Status

Terminated

Conditions

Surgery
Rectocele

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT03944720
02-18-102-024

Details and patient eligibility

About

Patients with rectoceles may present a variety of symptoms such as pelvic pressure, obstructive defecation or discomfort during sexual intercourse. The main symptom of the patient probably ends up conditioning if the patient is referred to a gynaecologist or a colorectal surgeon.

Different surgical techniques have been described to repair the rectocele. The posterior colporrhaphy is the preferred approach for most gynaecologists, while the transanal repair is the most common approach for the majority of colorectal surgeons. However, the small number of prospective studies, the inconsistent inclusion criteria and the variability of the outcome measures make difficult to know what the ideal surgical approach for a rectocele repair would be. Gynaecologists usually do not assess defecatory function before a rectocele repair, and studies focused on obstructive defecation include patients with other co-existing pathologies (rectal prolapse, rectal intussusception, enterocele) that may influence the success of the repair. Moreover, functional disorders such as the paradoxical contraction of the external anal sphincter or the puborectalis muscle are not systematically reported. On the other hand, many surgeons have questioned the transvaginal approach because it has been reported that patients may present dyspareunia after the surgery, although it is not systematically evaluated.

The hypothesis of the investigators is that the transvaginal approach for rectocele repair is an effective treatment for symptoms of obstructive defecation and is not associated with sexual dysfunction when the plication of the puborectalis muscle is not performed.

Enrollment

15 patients

Sex

Female

Ages

18 to 85 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Women

  • Older than 18 year old

  • Symptoms of obstructed defecation associated to a rectocele with an indication for surgery according to the following criteria:

    1. Symptoms of obstructed defecation according to Rome III criteria: straining, sensation of incomplete evacuation, sensation of anorectal obstruction/blockage, and/or manual manoeuvres to facilitate defecation at least in 25% of defecations for the last 3 months
    2. Incomplete emptying of the rectocele on a defecography
    3. Failure of conservative treatment including dietary advice and laxatives, with persisting symptoms of obstructive defecation
    4. Recto-rectal intussusception may coexist on defecography (grade I and II of Oxford Prolapse Grading System)
    5. Non-obstructive enterocele may coexist on defecography (type A enterocele: the small bowel descends to puboccoccygeal line (PCL) during straining and returns to PCL at the end of the straining attempt without compressing the rectal ampulla or compressing it from above with no obstruction)
    6. Absence of anal sphincter dyssynergia on anorectal manometry, or successful rehabilitation after biofeedback in the case of previous dyssynergia
  • Ability to understand the surgical procedure and the questionnaires of the study

  • Written informed consent

Exclusion criteria

  • Anal sphincter dyssynergia
  • Coexisting recto-anal intussusception on defecography or external rectal prolapse (grades III, IV and V Oxford Prolapse Grading System)
  • Coexisting enterocele compressing/obstructing the rectum on defecography (type B enterocele: the enterocele descends beyond the PCL to the perineum through the rectovaginal space to compress the rectal ampulla at the end of the evacuation process; type C enterocele (obstructive): the enterocele descends beyond the PCL to the perineum through the rectovaginal space to compress the rectal ampulla at the beginning of the evacuation process)
  • Slow transit constipation associated to obstructed defecation
  • Severe psychiatric disorder
  • Refusal to provide written informed consent

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Yolanda Ribas, MD PhD

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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