| Literature DB >> 35538253 |
Ellen Yeung1,2, Eva Malacova3, Christopher Maher4,5.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION AND HYPOTHESIS: Levator ani muscle avulsion as a risk factor for prolapse recurrence is not well established. This systematic review was aimed at evaluating the correlation between levator ani avulsion and postoperative prolapse recurrence with meta-analysis, specifically, the risk of subjective or objective prolapse recurrence and reoperation.Entities:
Keywords: Levator ani muscle avulsion; Pelvic organ prolapse; Recurrence; Risk factors; Surgery
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35538253 PMCID: PMC9270296 DOI: 10.1007/s00192-022-05217-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int Urogynecol J ISSN: 0937-3462 Impact factor: 1.932
Fig. 1Systematic review of the literature evaluating levator ani avulsion as a potential risk factor for prolapse recurrence. Flow chart summarising study selection and exclusion process
Study characteristics, surgeries performed, definition of recurrent prolapse and prevalence of levator ani muscle avulsion (LAMA)
| Reference; | Type of study | LAMA | Mean follow-up (range) | Main surgery | Concomitant surgery | Definition of recurrence |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Abdul Jalil et al. [ | Retrospective | 111/207 preop, 109/207 postop | 1.3 (0.3–5.5) years | One or combination of AC, PC, VH, SSF ± mesh | MUS | Insufficient information |
| Dietz et al. [ | Retrospective | 29/83 | 4.5 (3–6.4) years | AC | PC, VH, MUS | (a) Symptoms of prolapse OR (b) significant cystocele ICS POP-Q Ba > 0 OR (c) significant cystocele (Ba > 0 on USS (bladder edge >10mm below symphysis pubis on maximum Valsalva |
| Diez-Itza et al. [ | Prospective | 186/439 | 1 year | AC | PC, VH, MUS | (a) Anterior anatomic recurrence POP-Q > stage 2 (Ba > −1), (b) symptomatic recurrence (yes to question 3 of PFDI-20 questionnaire) |
| Model et al. [ | Retrospective | a | a | AC | a | (a) ICS POP-Q > stage 2, (b) patient-reported symptoms of prolapse (vaginal lump or dragging sensation) |
| Oversand et al. [ | Prospective | 96/189 | 12 (8–21) months | Man | PC | Predefined ‘optimal’ outcome, (a) anterior compartment Ba > −1, (b) mid compartment C > −5, (c) retreatment required within the first year of follow-up (surgery, physiotherapy, pessary); secondary outcome (a) patient0reported subjective satisfaction: cured, improved, unchanged, worsened |
| Rodrigo et al. [ | Retrospective | 130/334 | 2.51 (0.26–6.39) years | AC ± mesh | PC ± mesh, VH, SSF, MUS | (a) Recurrent symptoms (lump/dragging sensation), (b) ICS POP-Q Ba > −1, (c) cystocele reaching 10 mm below symphysis pubis on Valsalva on translabial USS |
| Santis-Moya et al. [ | Retrospective | 43/134 | 16 months | SCP | AC, PC, MUS, SH | (a) Anatomical recurrence of any compartment > stage 2 POP-Q and/or retreatment for POP, (b) symptomatic recurrence – affirmative answer to question 3 PFDI-20 questionnaire |
| Shek et al. [ | Retrospective | 117/296 | 1.8 (0.3–5.6) years | AC + mesh | VH, SSF | (a) Cystocele recurrence ICS POP-Q > Stage 2 OR (b) bladder descent > 10 mm below symphysis pubis on ultrasound |
| Vergeldt et al. [ | Retrospective | 104/279 | 1–2 years | AC | PC, VH, SSF, man | (a) Anterior anatomical recurrence > stage 2 POP-Q |
| Wong et al. [ | Retrospective | 80/209 | 2.2 (3 months – 5.6 years) years | AC + mesh | PC ± mesh, VH, SSF, MUS | (a) Subjective prolapse recurrence (symptomatic vaginal lump/bulge/dragging sensation), (b) objective recurrence – clinical cystocele > stage 2 ICS POP-Q or sonographic recurrence (bladder descent > 10 mm below symphysis pubis on USS) |
| Wong et al. [ | Retrospective | 64/183 | 4.47 years (without mesh), 3.45 years (mesh) | AC ± mesh | PC ± mesh, VH, SSF, MUS | (a) Subjective prolapse recurrence (symptomatic vaginal lump/bulge/dragging sensation), (b) objective recurrence – clinical cystocele > stage 2 ICS POP-Q or sonographic recurrence (bladder descent > 10 mm below symphysis pubis on USS) |
| Wong et al. [ | Prospective | 95/154 | 27.5 months (5 years mesh, 2 years no mesh) | VH + SSF ± AC, PC ± mesh, OR, SCP | MUS | (a) Subjective recurrence: any symptoms of vaginal bulge/dragging sensation, (b) objective recurrence POP-Q > stage 2 |
AC anterior colporrhaphy, PC posterior colporrhaphy, VH vaginal hysterectomy, SSF sacrospinous fixation, MUS midurethral sling, SCP laparoscopic sacrocolpopexy, Man Manchester repair, SH subtotal hysterectomy
aCould not be ascertained from the paper
Fig. 2Forest plot comparing unadjusted odds ratios (ORs) for subjective prolapse recurrence in patients with levator ani muscle avulsion. Summary of unadjusted odds ratios of papers reporting subjective prolapse recurrence. One asterisk indicates the native tissue group, two asterisks indicate the mesh group (vaginal and abdominal)
Fig. 3Forest plot comparing unadjusted (a) and adjusted (b) odds ratios (ORs) for objective any-compartment prolapse recurrence in patients with levator ani muscle avulsion. Summary of odds ratios (unadjusted and adjusted) of papers reporting objective any-compartment prolapse recurrence. One asterisk indicates the native tissue group, two asterisks indicate the mesh group (vaginal and abdominal)
Fig. 4Forest plot comparing unadjusted (a) and adjusted (b) odds ratios (ORs) for objective anterior compartment prolapse recurrence after native tissue or vaginal mesh surgery in patients with levator ani muscle avulsion. Summary of odds ratios (unadjusted and adjusted) of papers in subgroup analysis reporting objective anterior compartment-only prolapse recurrence
Fig. 5Risk of bias summary. Visual representation using the robvis visualisation tool of risk of bias for all studies included in the meta-analysis
Fig. 6Funnel plot and Egger regression test for a subjective recurrence (unadjusted), b objective any-compartment recurrence (unadjusted), c objective any-compartment recurrence (adjusted) and d adjusted objective anterior compartment-only recurrence. Summary of publication bias presented as funnel plots and Egger regression for subjective recurrence, objective any-compartment recurrence (unadjusted and adjusted) and objective anterior compartment-only recurrence
Fig. 7Summary of findings