| Literature DB >> 20459818 |
Annemarie van der Steen1, Marinus van der Ploeg, Marcel G W Dijkgraaf, Huub van der Vaart, Jan-Paul W R Roovers.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: About 40% of all patients with genital prolapse report stress-incontinence. In about half of the 60% patients that do not report stress-incontinence, occult urinary stress-incontinence can be detected. In these patients stress-incontinence is masked due to kinking or compression of the urethra by the prolapse.In case surgical correction is indicated there are two strategies to manage patients with combined prolapse and (occult) stress incontinence. This strategy is either (i) a combination of prolapse surgery and stress-incontinence surgery or (ii) to correct the prolapse first and evaluate afterwards whether additional stress-incontinence surgery is indicated. The advantage of combining prolapse and stress-incontinence surgery is that only few patients report stress-incontinence following such combination. However, this combination has been associated with an increased risk on complications, of which the development of obstructive micturition symptoms, overactive bladder symptoms and bladder retention are the most important ones. Furthermore, combining two procedures may be unnecessary as performing only prolapse surgery may cure stress-incontinence. In the randomized CUPIDO trials both strategies are compared in patients with prolapse and evident stress incontinence (CUPIDO I trial) and in patients with prolapse and occult stress incontinence (CUPIDO II trial). METHODS/Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20459818 PMCID: PMC2879229 DOI: 10.1186/1472-6874-10-16
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Womens Health ISSN: 1472-6874 Impact factor: 2.809
Participating hospitals in the Netherlands.
| Academic Medical Center, Amsterdam |
| Alant Vrouw, Bilthoven |
| Deventer Hospital, Deventer |
| Martini Hospital, Groningen |
| Maxima Medical Center, Eindhoven |
| Medical Center Leeuwarden, Leeuwarden |
| Reinier de Graaf Groep, Delft |
| Sint Antonius Hospital, Nieuwegein |
| TweeSteden Hospital, Tilburg |
| Twenteborg Hospital, Almelo |
| University Medical Center, Groningen |
| University Medical Center, Nijmegen |
| University Medical Center, Maastricht |
| VieCuri Medical Center, Venlo |
Figure 1Flowchart CUPIDO I.
Inclusion and exclusion criteria CUPIDO I.
| Inclusion criteria | Exclusion criteria |
|---|---|
| ≥ 18 years old | Inability to give informed consent |
| ≥ stage 2 prolapse | (Recent or planned) pregnancy |
| Intended surgery for prolapse | Previous anti-incontinence surgery |
| Recent prolapse surgery (<6 months) | |
| Previous surgery to bladder or urethra or diverticulum | |
| Systemic disease which could influence bladder function | |
| Planned chemo- or radiotherapy for neoplasm | |
| Participation in another study which could influence the results | |
| Chronic urinary retention | |
| Not predominant SUI (urge incontinence) | |
| Rectocele only |
Figure 2Flowchart CUPIDO II.
Inclusion and exclusion criteria for CUPIDO II.
| Inclusion criteria | Exclusion criteria |
|---|---|
| ≥ 18 years old | Inability to give informed consent |
| ≥ stage 2 prolapse | (Recent or planned) pregnancy |
| Intended surgery for prolapse | Previous anti-incontinence surgery |
| Recent prolapse surgery (<6 months) | |
| Previous surgery to bladder or urethra or diverticulum | |
| Systemic disease which could influence bladder function | |
| Planned chemo- or radiotherapy for neoplasm | |
| Participation in another study which could influence the results | |
| Chronic urinary retention | |
| Cupido 2: SUI ≥ once a week OR positive cough test |