Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Summary

Prolapse of the vaginal wall and uterus are common conditions affecting up to 50% of parous women. The socioeconomic, psychological and physical impacts of prolapse are considerable. 11% of women will undergo a surgical repair by the age of 80 years. The commonest compartment affected is the anterior vaginal wall. Unfortunately there is a significant rate of recurrent prolapse or a failure of the primary procedure. This has lead to the introduction of new techniques and the use of different materials to augment the repair. Mesh augmented repairs aim to reduce the rate of recurrent prolapse. However, the use of synthetic mesh is associated with complications which are not found in non mesh repairs. 10% of women will have a mesh complication of which 70% will require a further surgical procedure to manage the complication. There are extra costs associated with purchasing the mesh, with longer operating times to insert the mesh and managing complications caused by the mesh. Balancing the extra risks of mesh surgery against the benefits is probably one of the most contentious issues in urogynaecology at the present time.

Regulatory authorities in the USA (FDA) and UK (MHRA) have become increasingly interested in the use of mesh to support the vaginal wall in prolapse surgery due to risks and complications being reported. To date there is little evidence regarding the long term safety and efficacy of anterior mesh repairs. This study aims to rectify this deficiency for Perigee.


Clinical Trial Description

This will be a consecutive cohort study of patients identified from a surgical database of Perigees performed in a single centre. All patients will have had the procedure performed between 2007 and 2011. This will be a single centre study. The principle investigator has both electronic and hand written records of all Perigee repairs performed since the introduction of this technique in 2007. The patients will be identified from both the paper and electronic databases and cross referenced.

After obtained appropriate ethical approval, patients identified as having a perigee mesh inserted will be asked to attend Medway Hospital for a full clinical evaluation. They will be sent a letter with an appointment to come to the hospital. They will be asked to complete the Pelvic floor distress inventory questionnaire to assess their symptoms. They will have a pelvic examination to determine if they have any mesh erosion and will undergo a POP-Q score. This visit will take 1 hour. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT02642835
Study type Observational
Source Medway NHS Foundation Trust
Contact
Status Completed
Phase
Start date August 2015
Completion date March 2016

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Active, not recruiting NCT05422209 - The Influence of Simultaneous Posterior Colporrhaphy and Perineoplasty on the Efficiency and Safety of Mesh-augmented Sacrospinal Fixation (Apical Sling) in Advanced POP Repair. N/A
Active, not recruiting NCT05420831 - Comparison of Vaginal and Laparoscopic Apical Fixation Techniques for Pelvic Organ Prolapse Treatment N/A
Completed NCT05493735 - Lidocaine for Pessary Check Pain Reduction Phase 3
Completed NCT06126328 - Materna Prep Study Phase II Phase 2
Recruiting NCT05542836 - EVeRLAST 2-Year Follow-Up
Recruiting NCT05918367 - Multicenter Ventral Mesh Rectopexy Registry Collaborative
Recruiting NCT04172272 - The Influence of TAP Block in the Control of Postoperative Pain After Laparotomy for Gynecological Procedures N/A
Recruiting NCT04807920 - BOTOX® at the Time of Prolapse Surgery for OAB Phase 4
Completed NCT06268782 - The Effectiveness of an Online Exercise Program on Well-being of Postpartum Women N/A
Recruiting NCT03146195 - The 3D Reconstruction Research of Pelvic Organ Prolapse Disease N/A
Recruiting NCT02919852 - Laparoscopic Retrovesical Colpopectinopexia N/A
Completed NCT02925585 - Vaginal Tactile Imaging for Pelvic Floor Prolapse
Not yet recruiting NCT02536001 - Prospective Randomized Study to Compare Results of Pelvic Organ Prolapse Repair With One Versus Two Vaginal Meshes N/A
Recruiting NCT02113969 - Conservative Management of Symptomatic Pelvic Organ Prolapse Using Vaginal Pessaries: Generation of a Standardized Management Protocol N/A
Completed NCT02383199 - Polypropylene Mesh in Prolapse Surgery N/A
Terminated NCT01673360 - Collection of Long Term Patient Outcomes Data Following Implantation of AMS Surgical Devices N/A
Completed NCT01842464 - Sacro-Spinous Ligaments Anterior Apical Anchoring N/A
Withdrawn NCT01530191 - Factors Affecting Perioperative Outcomes N/A
Completed NCT01320631 - Male Sexual Experience and Its Impact on Quality of Life Before and After Their Sexual Partners Undergo Polypropylene Mesh Augmented Pelvic Floor Reconstruction N/A
Completed NCT00581412 - Composite Graft Use in Abdominal Sacrocolpopexy Reduces Erosion Rates N/A