Retropubic versus transobturator midurethral slings for stress incontinence

Holly E Richter, Michael E Albo, Halina M Zyczynski, Kimberly Kenton, Peggy A Norton, Larry T Sirls, Stephen R Kraus, Toby C Chai, Gary E Lemack, Kimberly J Dandreo, R Edward Varner, Shawn Menefee, Chiara Ghetti, Linda Brubaker, Ingrid Nygaard, Salil Khandwala, Thomas A Rozanski, Harry Johnson, Joseph Schaffer, Anne M Stoddard, Robert L Holley, Charles W Nager, Pamela Moalli, Elizabeth Mueller, Amy M Arisco, Marlene Corton, Sharon Tennstedt, T Debuene Chang, E Ann Gormley, Heather J Litman, Urinary Incontinence Treatment Network, Elizabeth A Gormley, Larry Sirls, Salil Khandwala, Linda Brubaker, Kimberly Kenton, Holly E Richter, L Keith Lloyd, Michael Albo, Charles Nager, Toby C Chai, Harry W Johnson, Halina M Zyczynski, Wendy Leng, Philippe Zimmern, Gary Lemack, Stephen Kraus, Thomas Rozanski, Peggy Norton, Ingrid Nygaard, Sharon Tennstedt, Anne Stoddard, Debuene Chang, Marva Moxey-Mims, Rebekah Rasooly, Amy Arisco, Jan Baker, Diane Borello-France, Kathryn L Burgio, Ananias Diokno, Melissa Fischer, MaryPat Fitzgerald, Chiara Ghetti, Patricia S Goode, Robert L Holley, Margie Kahn, Jerry Lowder, Karl Luber, Emily Luckacz, Alayne Markland, Shawn Menefee, Pamela Moalli, Elizabeth Mueller, Pradeep Nagaraju, Kenneth Peters, Elizabeth Sagan, Joseph Schaffer, Amanda Simsiman, Robert Starr, Gary Sutkin, R Edward Varner, Laura Burr, JoAnn Columbo, Tamara Dickinson, Rosanna Dinh, Judy Gruss, Alice Howell, Chaandini Jayachandran, Kathy Jesse, D Lynn Kalinoski, Barbara Leemon, Kristen Mangus, Karen Mislanovich, Elva Kelly Moore, Caren Prather, Sylvia Sluder, Mary Tulke, Robin Willingham, Kimberly Woodson, Gisselle Zazueta-Damina, Kinberly J Dandreo, Liyuan Huang, Rose Kowalski, Heather Litman, Marina Mihova, Anne Stoddard, Kerry Tanwar, Sharon Tennstedt, Yan Xu, J Quentin Clemens, Paul Abrams, Diedre Bland, Timothy B Boone, John Connett, Dee Fenner, William Henderson, Sheryl Kelsey, Deborah J Lightner, Deborah Myers, Bassem Wadie, J Christian Winters, Holly E Richter, Michael E Albo, Halina M Zyczynski, Kimberly Kenton, Peggy A Norton, Larry T Sirls, Stephen R Kraus, Toby C Chai, Gary E Lemack, Kimberly J Dandreo, R Edward Varner, Shawn Menefee, Chiara Ghetti, Linda Brubaker, Ingrid Nygaard, Salil Khandwala, Thomas A Rozanski, Harry Johnson, Joseph Schaffer, Anne M Stoddard, Robert L Holley, Charles W Nager, Pamela Moalli, Elizabeth Mueller, Amy M Arisco, Marlene Corton, Sharon Tennstedt, T Debuene Chang, E Ann Gormley, Heather J Litman, Urinary Incontinence Treatment Network, Elizabeth A Gormley, Larry Sirls, Salil Khandwala, Linda Brubaker, Kimberly Kenton, Holly E Richter, L Keith Lloyd, Michael Albo, Charles Nager, Toby C Chai, Harry W Johnson, Halina M Zyczynski, Wendy Leng, Philippe Zimmern, Gary Lemack, Stephen Kraus, Thomas Rozanski, Peggy Norton, Ingrid Nygaard, Sharon Tennstedt, Anne Stoddard, Debuene Chang, Marva Moxey-Mims, Rebekah Rasooly, Amy Arisco, Jan Baker, Diane Borello-France, Kathryn L Burgio, Ananias Diokno, Melissa Fischer, MaryPat Fitzgerald, Chiara Ghetti, Patricia S Goode, Robert L Holley, Margie Kahn, Jerry Lowder, Karl Luber, Emily Luckacz, Alayne Markland, Shawn Menefee, Pamela Moalli, Elizabeth Mueller, Pradeep Nagaraju, Kenneth Peters, Elizabeth Sagan, Joseph Schaffer, Amanda Simsiman, Robert Starr, Gary Sutkin, R Edward Varner, Laura Burr, JoAnn Columbo, Tamara Dickinson, Rosanna Dinh, Judy Gruss, Alice Howell, Chaandini Jayachandran, Kathy Jesse, D Lynn Kalinoski, Barbara Leemon, Kristen Mangus, Karen Mislanovich, Elva Kelly Moore, Caren Prather, Sylvia Sluder, Mary Tulke, Robin Willingham, Kimberly Woodson, Gisselle Zazueta-Damina, Kinberly J Dandreo, Liyuan Huang, Rose Kowalski, Heather Litman, Marina Mihova, Anne Stoddard, Kerry Tanwar, Sharon Tennstedt, Yan Xu, J Quentin Clemens, Paul Abrams, Diedre Bland, Timothy B Boone, John Connett, Dee Fenner, William Henderson, Sheryl Kelsey, Deborah J Lightner, Deborah Myers, Bassem Wadie, J Christian Winters

Abstract

Background: Midurethral slings are increasingly used for the treatment of stress incontinence, but there are limited data comparing types of slings and associated complications.

Methods: We performed a multicenter, randomized equivalence trial comparing outcomes with retropubic and transobturator midurethral slings in women with stress incontinence. The primary outcome was treatment success at 12 months according to both objective criteria (a negative stress test, a negative pad test, and no retreatment) and subjective criteria (self-reported absence of symptoms, no leakage episodes recorded, and no retreatment). The predetermined equivalence margin was +/-12 percentage points.

Results: A total of 597 women were randomly assigned to a study group; 565 (94.6%) completed the 12-month assessment. The rates of objectively assessed treatment success were 80.8% in the retropubic-sling group and 77.7% in the transobturator-sling group (3.0 percentage-point difference; 95% confidence interval [CI], -3.6 to 9.6). The rates of subjectively assessed success were 62.2% and 55.8%, respectively (6.4 percentage-point difference; 95% CI, -1.6 to 14.3). The rates of voiding dysfunction requiring surgery were 2.7% in those who received retropubic slings and 0% in those who received transobturator slings (P=0.004), and the respective rates of neurologic symptoms were 4.0% and 9.4% (P=0.01). There were no significant differences between groups in postoperative urge incontinence, satisfaction with the results of the procedure, or quality of life.

Conclusions: The 12-month rates of objectively assessed success of treatment for stress incontinence with the retropubic and transobturator approaches met the prespecified criteria for equivalence; the rates of subjectively assessed success were similar between groups but did not meet the criteria for equivalence. Differences in the complications associated with the two procedures should be discussed with patients who are considering surgical treatment for incontinence. (ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT00325039.)

2010 Massachusetts Medical Society

Figures

Figure 1. Study Enrollment, Randomization, and Assessment
Figure 1. Study Enrollment, Randomization, and Assessment
Figure 2. Assessment of Equivalence at 12…
Figure 2. Assessment of Equivalence at 12 Months between a Retropubic and a Transobturator Midurethral Sling as Treatment for Urinary Incontinence
The difference in the rates of treatment success (retropubic minus transobturator) at 12 months is shown, with two-sided 95% confidence intervals (CIs). A value greater than 0 percentage points indicates that there is a higher success rate with the retropubic sling than with the transobturator sling; a value less than 0 indicates that there is a higher success rate with the transobturator sling than with the retropubic sling. If the entire confidence interval lies within a prespecified range of −12 to +12 percentage points, the retropubic and transobturator slings can be considered to be equivalent.
Figure 3. Proportion of Patients with Treatment…
Figure 3. Proportion of Patients with Treatment Failure at 12 Months, According to Objective and Subjective Criteria
Retreatment includes surgical, pharmacologic, or behavioral treatment, placement of a new device, and other treatment. Stress-type symptoms of urinary incontinence were assessed with the use of the Medical, Epidemiological and Social Aspects of Aging questionnaire.

Source: PubMed

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