OBJECTIVE: To document the experience at a tertiary referral hospital in India with managing complex and complicated vesicovaginal fistulae (VVF) by the transvaginal route, and to document the complications and the long-term outcome of the patients. METHODS: The medical records of 102 patients with complex or complicated VVF who underwent transvaginal surgical repair during 2000-2009 were reviewed retrospectively. RESULTS: The mean age of the patients was 24 years and the mean duration of urinary incontinence was 3 years (range 6 months to 12 years). The patients were followed up for a median of 48 months. In total, 78 patients had obstetric fistulae, 20 patients had surgical (gynecologic) fistulae, and 4 patients had postradiation fistulae. The overall success rate for the transvaginal approach was 86.3%. Fourteen patients remained incontinent despite the surgical repair. Early failure of the repair was observed in 11.8% of the patients and delayed failure in 2.0%. Postoperative complications included stress urinary incontinence (9.8%), urge urinary incontinence (7.8%), dyspareunia (5.9%), and chronic labial pain (2.0%). CONCLUSION: The transvaginal approach to the repair of complex and complicated VVF gives good long-term results with low complication rates.
OBJECTIVE: To document the experience at a tertiary referral hospital in India with managing complex and complicated vesicovaginal fistulae (VVF) by the transvaginal route, and to document the complications and the long-term outcome of the patients. METHODS: The medical records of 102 patients with complex or complicated VVF who underwent transvaginal surgical repair during 2000-2009 were reviewed retrospectively. RESULTS: The mean age of the patients was 24 years and the mean duration of urinary incontinence was 3 years (range 6 months to 12 years). The patients were followed up for a median of 48 months. In total, 78 patients had obstetric fistulae, 20 patients had surgical (gynecologic) fistulae, and 4 patients had postradiation fistulae. The overall success rate for the transvaginal approach was 86.3%. Fourteen patients remained incontinent despite the surgical repair. Early failure of the repair was observed in 11.8% of the patients and delayed failure in 2.0%. Postoperative complications included stress urinary incontinence (9.8%), urge urinary incontinence (7.8%), dyspareunia (5.9%), and chronic labial pain (2.0%). CONCLUSION: The transvaginal approach to the repair of complex and complicated VVF gives good long-term results with low complication rates.