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Utero-vaginal prolapse is a common, often disabling, condition experienced by women of varying ages. The traditional surgical treatment for utero-vaginal prolapse often includes vaginal hysterectomy and anterior or posterior colporrhaphy. Growing emphasis on patient-centered medicine and patient-generated definitions of surgical success has resulted in reassessment of uterine preservation versus hysterectomy at the time of apical POP repair. Various techniques have been described for uterine preserving prolapse surgery, which may include vaginal sacrospinous hysteropexy, transvaginal mesh kits, abdominal sacrohysteropexy using mesh and laparoscopic uterine suspension using sling or mesh. A modified form of uterine-preserving prolapse surgery using a combined vaginal and laparoscopic approach was introduced and a series of 70 women was reported. To date, there have been no randomized studies comparing the outcomes of vaginal assisted laparoscopic uterine suspension (hysteropexy) with conventional vaginal hysterectomy. Women attending the gynecology clinic at a tertiary referral urogynecology unit in tertiary referral training and research hospital requesting surgical treatment for STAGE 2-4 symptomatic uterine prolapse will be offered participation in a randomized trial, over a 2-year period. Subjects participating in the study were randomly assigned to either of two groups: Group A, Vaginally Assisted Laparoscopic Hysteropexy (VALH), or Group B, Vaginal Hysterectomy and Mc Call Culdoplasty (VH + Mc Call).1 year following surgery, vaginal prolapse will be assessed again using the International Consultation on Incontinence Questionnaire for Vaginal Symptoms (ICIQ-VS) questionnaire and the Pelvic Organ Prolapse -Quantification (POP-Q) examination by another researcher then the operator.
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Utero-vaginal prolapse is a common, often disabling, condition experienced by women of varying ages. The traditional surgical treatment for utero-vaginal prolapse often includes vaginal hysterectomy and anterior or posterior colporrhaphy. Growing emphasis on patient-centered medicine and patient-generated definitions of surgical success has resulted in reassessment of uterine preservation versus hysterectomy at the time of apical pelvic organ prolapse (POP) repair. Comparison of study outcomes between hysteropexy and hysterectomy are confounded by anatomic variables (isolated apical prolapse or multiple compartment prolapse), hormonal status (premenopausal, postmenopausal on hormone therapy, and postmenopausal without hormone therapy), and surgical approach (vaginal, open abdominal, laparoscopic, and robotic). In addition, the number of women who subsequently undergo hysterectomy after a uterus-sparing prolapse surgery is not known. With the caveat of these limitations, new short-term data are available to inform consideration of uterine-sparing POP repair. Various techniques have been described for uterine preserving prolapse surgery, which may include vaginal sacrospinous hysteropexy, transvaginal mesh kits, abdominal sacrohysteropexy using mesh and laparoscopic uterine suspension using sling or mesh. A modified form of uterine-preserving prolapse surgery using a combined vaginal and laparoscopic approach was introduced and a series of 70 women was reported.To date, there have been no randomized studies comparing the outcomes of vaginal assisted laparoscopic uterine suspension (hysteropexy) with conventional vaginal hysterectomy.
This is a single-center, randomized controlled study of two parallel groups. Women attending the gynecology clinic at a tertiary referral urogynecology unit requesting surgical treatment for STAGE 2-4 symptomatic uterine prolapse will be offered participation in a randomized trial, over a 2-year period between February 2018 and February 2020.
Requirements for women recruited are that
Investigators will exclude women with
VALH surgical procedure described below:
The procedure was performed under general anesthesia with the patient initially in the lithotomy position. After insertion of a urinary catheter, a 2 cm transverse vaginal incision was performed to the posterior cervix. The vaginal mucosa on the posterior cervix was dissected and type 1 polypropylene mesh secured to the posterior cervix with six 2/0 polydioxanone sutures. After skin preparation, and draping, a pneumoperitoneum was created and three laparoscopic ports were placed; 11 mm umbilical, 5 mm left and right lateral ports, and 5 mm suprapubic port. The sacral promontory was subsequently visualized and the presacral peritoneum was opened with monopolar diathermy and laparoscopic scissors.The tail end of the mesh was then push forward to the promontorium in the retroperitoneal region under laparoscopic visualisation. The end of the mesh grasped and pulled up laparoscopically. The uterus pushed up to the using the uterine manipulator. The mesh was then tacked to the sacral promontory with 5 mm helical fasteners. Finally, the mesh was completely covered with peritoneum, gas was expelled and ports were withdrawn under vision. Skin incisions were closed with absorbable fine sutures.
On the day of the operation allocation will be confirmed and appropriate consent will be obtained for the specific surgical procedure. Vaginal hysterectomy + Mc Call Culdoplasty and vaginal assisted laparoscopic hysteropexy will combined with anterior and/or posterior repair depending on the judgment of the surgeon at the time of the operation. Each woman will be followed up initially in the clinic 3 months post-surgery as part of the departmental routine. Participants will then invite for review, as part of the trial, at a dedicated clinic, 1 year following surgery. Vaginal prolapse will be assessed again using the International Consultation on Incontinence Questionnaire for Vaginal Symptoms (ICIQ-VS) questionnaire and the Pelvic Organ Prolapse Quantification (POP-Q) examination by another researcher then the operator. During the interview, further questions will be asked regarding post-operative recovery, current urinary symptoms, Urogenital Distress Inventory Short Form (UDI-6) and the Incontinence Impact Questionnaire Short Form (IIQ-7) and their satisfaction with the operation. Subjective surgical outcome will be measured using the Patient Global Impression of Improvement (PGI-I), which is a validated tool as a global index of response to prolapse surgery.
The women's prolapse symptoms and their impact will be evaluated before surgical treatment.
The measure for primary outcome is treatment failure defined as recurrent apical prolapse surgery required within the first year post-operatively.
The secondary outcome measures are change in anatomy quantified by POP-Q and symptoms quantified using the ICIQ-VS questionnaire scores for prolapse, sexual wellbeing, quality of life, and PGI-I score, UDI-6 and IIQ-7 scores. Other secondary outcome measures are operation time, blood loss, hospital stay, and time before return to normal activity.
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49 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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