Conference Coverage

POP severity not linked to risk of de novo stress urinary incontinence


 

AT PFD WEEK 2016

– Surgical correction of severe pelvic organ prolapse (POP) is no more likely to lead to stress urinary incontinence than is correction of less severe POP, suggest findings from a retrospective study of 206 patients at a tertiary care center.

But a baseline complaint of stress urinary incontinence (SUI) prior to surgery, despite a negative SUI evaluation, was associated with an increased risk, Alexandriah Alas, MD, and her colleagues at the Cleveland Clinic Florida in Weston wrote in a poster presented at Pelvic Floor Disorders Week, sponsored by the American Urogynecologic Society.

“We recommend counseling patients with a negative evaluation that there is up to a 10.6% risk of developing de novo SUI,” the researchers wrote.

Past studies have linked surgical correction of POP with a 16%-51% increase in risk of de novo SUI, but have not examined whether severe prolapse adds to that risk. The researchers reviewed records from patients who underwent surgical POP correction at their center between 2003 and 2013, excluding those with objective evidence of SUI at baseline or a history of incontinence surgery. They included patients with a baseline subjective complaint of SUI, as long as it was not the primary presenting complaint.

A total of 48 (23%) patients had massive POP – that is, a POP-Q score of at least 3 at points Ba, Bp, or C – and 158 patients had less massive POP, the researchers wrote. In all, 22 patients (10.6%) developed de novo SUI. Postsurgical rates of de novo SUI were 12.5% among women with massive POP and 10.6% among women with less severe POP (P = .6).

Women with massive POP tended to be older and had a higher incidence of hypertension than those with less severe POP. After controlling for these differences, a baseline complaint of SUI was the strongest predictor of de novo SUI, increasing the odds of this outcome more than fivefold (adjusted odds ratio, 5.5; 95% confidence interval, 1.4-23.9). Two other factors trended toward statistical significance in this multivariable model – a baseline complaint of mixed urinary incontinence and a longer POP-Q point D value (-9.5 instead of -7.5).

Among women with no baseline complaint of SUI, the incidence of de novo SUI was 6.3%. Significant predictors of de novo SUI in this subgroup included longer total vaginal length (10.5 cm vs. 9.5 cm, P = .003) and urinary leaks, even if they occurred about every other day as compared to not at all (P = .02).

The researchers did not report information on funding sources or financial disclosures.

Recommended Reading

VIDEO: Is hysterectomy still best for complex atypical hyperplasia?
MDedge ObGyn
Oophorectomy cost-effective at 4% lifetime ovarian cancer risk
MDedge ObGyn
Women with ovarian cancer wait over a month to start treatment
MDedge ObGyn
Power morcellation dropped, abdominal hysterectomy increased after FDA warning
MDedge ObGyn
Better survival with primary surgery in stage IIIC ovarian ca
MDedge ObGyn
Robotic surgery boasts fewer postoperative complications in radical hysterectomy
MDedge ObGyn
Absorbable suture performs well in sacrocolpopexy with mesh
MDedge ObGyn
Laparoscopic hysterectomy best in morbidly obese uterine cancer patients
MDedge ObGyn
Laparoscopic sacrocolpopexy offers advantages over abdominal route
MDedge ObGyn
Fluorescein, 10% dextrose topped other media for visualizing ureteral patency
MDedge ObGyn