Role of pelvic floor ultrasound in the follow-up of patients with mid-urethral slings.

Escura Sancho S1, Ros Cerro C1, Anglès-Acedo S1, Bataller Sánchez E1, Sánchez Ruiz E1, Carmona Herrera F1, Espuña-Pons M1

Research Type

Clinical

Abstract Category

Female Stress Urinary Incontinence (SUI)

Abstract 183
Open Discussion ePosters
Scientific Open Discussion Session 11
Thursday 8th September 2022
16:25 - 16:30 (ePoster Station 4)
Exhibition Hall
Stress Urinary Incontinence Imaging Urodynamics Techniques
1. Pelvic Floor Unit, ICGON, Hospital Clínic de Barcelona, University of Barcelona
In-Person
Presenter
C

Cristina Ros Cerro

Links

Poster

Abstract

Hypothesis / aims of study
Up to 5-20% of mid-urethral slings (MUS) will fail causing persistence or recurrence of stress urinary incontinence (SUI), with the estimated incidence of reintervention following MUS placement being around 6% in the following 5 years after surgery. One of the causes of MUS failure could be an inadequate surgical implantation technique. Misplacement of the MUS can be verified by pelvic floor ultrasound (PF-US), checking the adequate sling position, symmetry, sling distance to the urethral lumen and the concordant movement between the sling and the urethra during Valsalva maneuver.
The aim of this study was to evaluate the role of PF-US in explaining surgical failure in patients with persistent or recurrent urinary incontinence symptoms after MUS surgery for SUI at mid-term follow-up.
Study design, materials and methods
We carried out a historical cohort study including women undergoing MUS surgery for SUI with transobturator MUS (TOT-MUS) and retropubic MUS (RT-MUS) between 2013 and 2015 in a tertiary university hospital. The inclusion criteria were women who underwent SUI surgery with a TOT-MUS or a RT-MUS and accepted to attend to a face-to-face control visit five years post-surgery. The face-to-face visits were performed between September 2019 and March 2020. 
Preoperatively, all patients were assessed using the Spanish-validated questionnaire Incontinence Questionnaire-Short Form (ICIQ-UI-SF), a pelvic examination and an International Continence Society (ICS) standard urodynamic test (ICS-SUT). 
At the five-year post-surgery visit, patients were assessed using the ICIQ-UI-SF, a pelvic examination, an ICS Uniform Cough Stress Test (ICS-UCST), a urethral pressure profile, an uroflowmetry and a PF-US. With the PF-US we evaluated the sonographic parameters of the MUS which included its position relative to the urethra, the distance to the urethral lumen (in mm), the symmetry and the concordance of the urethral movement with the MUS during the Valsalva. The movement was considered concordant when the sling location on maximal Valsalva relative to the urethral length was identical to that at rest, causing urethral kinking. 
The primary outcome of the study was the correlation of MUS's sonographic parameters with SUI cure (negative ICS-UCST, ICIQ-UI-SF <5 points and no symptoms of SUI), at five-years post-surgery. Secondary outcomes were the changes at 1 and 5 years after surgery of maximum urethral closure pressure (MUCP) and the persistence of symptoms of urgency urinary incontinence (UUI).
Results
Eighty-seven patients (80 TOT-MUS, 7 RT-MUS) were included. The mean age of patients was 56.8 years and 61% of women were menopausal. The mean number of vaginal deliveries was 1.9 and the mean body mass index was 28.1 Kg/m2. The mean score of ICIQ-UI-SF was 16.0 points with 57% of patients referring UUI symptoms and the mean MUCP was 61.9 cmH2O.
Five years after surgery, all patients referred improvement of urinary incontinence and objective cure of SUI was demonstrated in 81.2%. According with the answers of the ICIQ-UI-SF, when this preoperative proportion of patients with UUI was compared with the postoperative proportion at five-year follow-up, no significant difference was found (p=0.560).
The MUS was sonographically correct in 67 (98.5%) of the 68 patients with cure of SUI. In only 4 (28.6%) of the 14 patients with non-cured SUI, the MUS was considered incorrectly placed (Table 1). 
The MUCP decreased from 61.9 to 48.8 cmH2O at 5 years follow-up (p<0.01) and up to 53% of women had UUI symptoms after surgery, with a non-significant decrease compared to baseline.
Interpretation of results
Patients cured of SUI showed sonographically correct MUS placement by PF-US. Less than one third of cases of SUI persistence or recurrence after MUS surgery could be explained by a sonographically incorrect sling. Low urethral resistance and/or persistence of UUI symptoms could help explaining the remaining failures.
Concluding message
In patients with SUI persistence or recurrence after MUS, a complete functional and anatomic study, including urodynamics and PF-US, should be performed before deciding on the next management strategy.
Figure 1
Disclosures
Funding None Clinical Trial No Subjects Human Ethics Committee Comité de ética de la investigación y medicamentos Helsinki Yes Informed Consent Yes
19/06/2024 12:37:21