Pelvic Organ Prolapse Clinical Trial
Official title:
A Multicenter Clinical Safety Assessment of Polypropylene Transvaginal Mesh in Pelvic Reconstructive Surgery
Pelvic organ prolapse is characterized by a lack of pelvic floor support causing the pelvic
organs and vaginal walls to protrude. For decades, suture repair techniques have been the
primary choice of surgical treatment when indicated.
The notion of reinforcing pelvic floor defects using biomaterial implants is not an
exclusively contemporary idea. Traditional surgical techniques are frequently associated
with unsatisfying anatomical recurrence rates and over the years sporadic attempts have been
made to introduce novel surgical techniques using a variety of biomaterials as support with
varying success. It is plausible that inherently weak, or damaged, pelvic floor supportive
tissues need to be reinforced by a permanent support to avoid the high rates of recurrences
commonly described using traditional techniques. However, use of biomaterials in pelvic
reconstructive surgery has become widespread in just a few years despite a lack of clinical
safety data, or compelling clinical evidence demonstrating that it improves outcomes
compared to traditional suture techniques.
It is likely that biomaterials need to be "anchored" in tissues not afflicted by the
disease, in order to provide the intended pelvic floor support. This has given rise to
transvaginal surgical techniques using a transobturator approach passing the mesh through
the arcus tendineous fascia pelvis, or the sacrospinous ligaments through a transgluteal
approach. Already commercially available implant materials are in need of patient safety
documentation, both when considering the surgical techniques by which these materials are
placed in the body as well as the actual materials. Complication rates and perioperative
morbidity using these surgical routes in pelvic organ prolapse surgery are generally
unknown.
The aim of the present study was to assess the long term morbidity, and describe the
complications, associated with transvaginal mesh repair of pelvic organ prolapse using the
PROLIFT®-system.
Main objective:
- To describe short and long-term complications associated with pelvic organ prolapse repair
using macroporous polypropylene transvaginal mesh (TVM) using a transobturator or
transgluteal approach.
Secondary objectives:
- To describe anatomical restoration of the pelvic floor following transvaginal mesh
repair of pelvic organ prolapse using the Pelvic Organ Prolapse Quantification system
(POP-Q).
- To describe subjective patient outcomes using validated questionnaires with regard to
pelvic organ function (UDI), sexual function (PISQ) and quality of life (IIQ).
Study design:
- A prospective multicenter open labeled single cohort study.
Study protocol:
- At baseline patients receive oral and written information about the study.
- Following informed consent, patients are included in the study if pelvic organ prolapse
surgery is indicated and all inclusion, and no exclusion, criteria are fulfilled.
- Preoperatively all patients answer a detailed self reported questionnaire on health
history, previous surgery, obstetrical history and current diseases and medications.
The questionnaire also includes questions on symptoms from the pelvic organs and pelvic
floor.
- Preoperatively all patients undergo a clinical examination using the POP-Q system, as
well as, a validated clinical inflammatory grading of the vaginal compartments.
- Patients undergo the TVM procedure in a standardised manner with all participating
surgeons having undergone pretrial surgical training and adopting the same surgical
technique. All patients receive standardised intraoperative antibiotics.
- Complications during the immediate peri- and postoperative hospital stay are registered
in hospital charts.
- All patients receive a clinical follow-up appointment 2 months, 1 year and 3 years
after surgery. At follow-up identical self reported questionnaires are used for
subjective assessment. Clinical examinations are performed as preoperatively suing the
POP-Q system and macroscopic inflammatory grading. Complications are registered in a
specific protocol and hospital charts.
- All protocols are to be submitted after the 2 months follow-up for an interrim safety
analysis. The study chair is responsible for stopping the study if the rate, or
seriousness, of complications exceed the expected.
- Patients are free to withdraw from the study at any point.
;
Allocation: Non-Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Safety/Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Single Group Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Treatment
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