Updated May 14, 2013, 4:08 p.m. ET
By SHIRLEY S. WANG Wall Street Journal FiDA
highlight
A new study finds that long-term benefits are limited for many women who undergo an
operation to treat a common condition called pelvic organ prolapse, which can lead to urinary
problems and discomfort.
The surgery, called abdominal sacrocolpopexy, has been the standard
treatment for the gynecological condition for more than three decades, but its outcomes rarely have been
studied systematically beyond two years. In addition, there isn't
agreement among doctors about what constitutes success for the procedure.
In pelvic organ prolapse, the uterus or vaginal walls "drop"
after childbirth and sometimes protrude into or out of the vaginal opening.
Most women who have had children vaginally have some degree of prolapse but may
not notice symptoms, which can include feeling a bulge in the vagina, a delay in
urinary stream and difficulty with defecation.
For some 225,000 women a year in
the U.S., the symptoms become so problematic that they get surgery.
Two procedures, abdominal sacrocolpopexy and a type of vaginal surgery,
are used to prop up or anchor the organs to keep them in place, sometimes with the use of
synthetic mesh. A third operation, used only rarely for older women,
closes up the vagina.
The new study, published Tuesday in JAMA, the Journal of the American Medical Association,
followed the outcome of more than 200 women for an average of seven years
after sacrocolpopexy surgery. It is one of the longest follow-ups to date of
such patients.
The study showed that many women receive short-term relief from symptoms
and most don't need repeat surgery, but a substantial portion—some 25%—see some symptoms recur
over time, and more than 60% develop urinary incontinence, sometimes as a
result of the surgery itself.
"Surgery for pelvic organ prolapse isn't perfect," said Ingrid
Nygaard, first author on the study and a professor of obstetrics and gynecology
at the University of Utah School of Medicine. "It is very good at
alleviating symptoms and improving quality of life, but the results may not
last forever."
For those who had mesh implanted as part of the procedure, some 10%
experienced movement of the mesh from its original location, which "may
cause problems for years down the road," said Dr. Nygaard.
The use of synthetic mesh in a related pelvic organ prolapse procedure,
in which the mesh is inserted through the vagina rather than through the
abdomen, is the subject of
hundreds of product-liability lawsuits against mesh makers. The suits
allege the women were injured when the mesh failed.
Mesh contraction can occur in the vaginal procedure and cause pain, but
mesh movement with the abdominal surgery is unlikely to be painful, according
to Dr. Nygaard, who has no ties with mesh makers.
Strategies to prevent pelvic organ prolapse center on pelvic-muscle
exercises and childbirth through cesarean section. Some studies have shown such
exercises to be effective, and one large epidemiological study in Sweden
suggested a link between C-sections and lower risk of the condition. But the
preventive effect of C-sections hasn't been studied in a randomized trial.
Further reading:
Jane Akre: Mesh Device News Desk
http://meshmedicaldevicenewsdesk.com/featured-articles/mesh-fails-25-percent-of-time-in-vaginal-prolapse-repair/
Study Press Release:
http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2013-05/tjnj-sel050913.php
JAMA study:
http://media.jamanetwork.com/news-item/study-evaluates-long-term-effectiveness-of-surgery-for-pelvic-organ-prolapse/
Further reading:
Jane Akre: Mesh Device News Desk
http://meshmedicaldevicenewsdesk.com/featured-articles/mesh-fails-25-percent-of-time-in-vaginal-prolapse-repair/
Ingrid Nygaard:
http://healthcare.utah.edu/fad/mddetail.php?physicianID=u0513310Study Press Release:
http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2013-05/tjnj-sel050913.php
JAMA study:
http://media.jamanetwork.com/news-item/study-evaluates-long-term-effectiveness-of-surgery-for-pelvic-organ-prolapse/
No comments:
Post a Comment