View clinical trials related to Stress Urinary Incontinence.
Filter by:An international, multi-center, single arm, prospective clinical study designed to assess the safety and efficacy of the Coloplast Altis single incision sling system for females with stress urinary incontinence (SUI).
This is a pilot study to assess the feasibility and success of performing the TVT-Secur in the office setting. Endpoints would be success, complications, and patient and physician acceptance of the procedure. Success would be assessed by validated questionnaires. This is a prospective single arm study of 20 patients who will have the TVT-Secur procedure done in the office under local anesthesia. They will be followed for a period of 1 year.
The purpose of this research study is to identify if the cough stress test is equal to the 24hour pad test in assessing stress urinary incontinence.
Nowadays the clinical significance of an occult stress urinary incontinence and its optimal treatment is not known.Regarding treatment, there are 2 main approaches : either the systematic preventive treatment of the occult stress urinary incontinence by means of a tension free vaginal tape (TOT) together with the treatment of prolapse or the treatment of prolapse in the first place and treatment of stress incontinence in a second time when and if it appears.This study is expected to provide objective evidence concerning the efficacy and security of TOT implantation for the prevention treatment of occult stress urinary incontinence in women with pelvic organ prolapse and occult urinary incontinence.The perspective is to improve the management of these patients by providing evidence based recommendation for their treatment.
This is a prospective, comparative randomized controled trial. The general purposes of this study is to compare the efficacy and safety of TVTO™ and TVTSecur™ as surgical treatment for female urinary stress incontinence.
The purpose of this trial was to discover which type of operation for stress urinary incontinence in women offered better results: autologous slings, TVT or Pelvicol slings.
Urinary incontinence which is a major health issue in women affects 30-40% of older women. Surgical treatments for SUI have undergone many modifications in the last century. The Needleless Sling System is a one incision, minimally invasive, surgical procedure that has had great acceptance in Europe and has recently received FDA Clearance for use in the United States. We will evaluate effectiveness and patient reported outcomes for Needleless® sling system (Neomedic International). This is a prospective, multicenter, registry. Up to 150 women will be enrolled from up to 3 registry sites. Patients will be evaluated at baseline, peri-operatively, and post-operatively up to 2 months, up to 6 months and at 12 months. Effectiveness evaluations will include a standing stress test (objective cure), SANDVIK questions (subjective cure) & I-QOL (quality of life measure). Other evaluations will include type of anesthesia, concurrent surgery, operative time, post-operative pain, length of hospital stay, returning to usual activities, change of lower urinary tract symptoms (BFLUTSSF, voiding diaries), goal achievement and patient satisfaction.
Midurethral tapes are by now standard procedure in the surgical treatment of women with stress urinary incontinence. While the retropubic TVT is well documented with long-term results up to 11 years and continence rates of 90 %, the published data for the transoburator tapes (TO) cover follow-up of 3 years only. So far, all tapes establish continence effectively. Recently, the detailed 27-item Incontinence Outcome Questionnaire (IOQ) was constructed to assess patient-reported outcome and quality of life after insertion of a midurethral tape and validated for the German language. The aim of this study was to evaluate patient-reported mid- and long-term outcome after insertion of tension-free vaginal tape (TVT), transobturator sling, outside-in (TOT) and tension-free transobturator tape, inside-out (TVT-O).
The hypothesis under evaluation is that fesotorodine may provide clinical benefit in the treatment of the condition of stress urinary incontinence
The Autologous Cell Therapy for Female SUI study is a clinical trial to determine the safety and potential effectiveness of a single dose of 200 million Cook MyoSite Autologous Muscle Derived Cells for treatment of Stress Urinary Incontinence.