Impact of surgery for stress incontinence on morbidity: cohort study
- PMID: 9420489
- PMCID: PMC2127933
- DOI: 10.1136/bmj.315.7121.1493
Impact of surgery for stress incontinence on morbidity: cohort study
Abstract
Objectives: To describe the impact of surgery for stress incontinence on the severity of symptoms, other mental and physical symptoms, and overall health. To describe the incidence of postoperative complications.
Design: Prospective cohort study; questionnaires completed by patients before and 3, 6, and 12 months after surgery. Questionnaires completed by surgeons both before and after surgery.
Setting: 18 hospitals in the North Thames region.
Subjects: 442 women treated surgically for stress incontinence between January 1993 and June 1994. 367 women returned the 3 month questionnaire; 364 returned the 6 month questionnaire; and 359 returned the 12 month questionnaire. 49 surgeons provided perioperative information on 285 of the 442 women and postoperative information on 278.
Main outcome measures: Stress incontinence symptom severity index, other urinary symptoms, bowel function, mental health, complications, global measures.
Results: Most women (288; 87%) reported an improvement in the severity of their stress incontinence, though only 92 (28%) were cured (continent). These improvements persisted for at least 12 months. The likelihood of improvement was similar regardless of whether urodynamic pressure studies had been conducted before surgery. Following surgery, women were less likely to suffer from urinary frequency, nocturia, postvoid fullness, dysuria, and urgency. While mental health improved for 194 (71%), a quarter of women reported deterioration. Only 37 (10%) were satisfied with postoperative pain control. A third experienced one or more complications while in hospital, most commonly difficulty urinating. This problem affected 1 in 11 women after discharge. A year after surgery two thirds of women reported feeling better (251; 72%), that the outcome met or exceeded their expectations (230; 66%), and that they would recommend the operation to a friend in a similar situation (239; 68%), and that they would recommend the operation to a friend in a similar situation (239; 68%). Surgeons tended to be more optimistic about the effects of surgery; they were satisfied with the outcome in 176 (85%) cases and would again treat 245 (94%) of the women as they had done previously.
Conclusions: Although surgery reduces the severity of stress incontinence it is not as effective as current textbooks suggest. Women considering surgery should be provided with more accurate information on the likelihood of an improvement in symptoms and the occurrence of complications, including postoperative pain. Urgency and urge incontinence should not be considered contraindications to surgery. The need for urodynamic assessment before surgery should be reappraised.
Comment in
-
Impact of surgery for stress incontinence on morbidity. Effects of confounding variables on outcomes of incontinence surgery must be considered.BMJ. 1998 Jul 11;317(7151):143; disscussion 144. BMJ. 1998. PMID: 9657800 Free PMC article. No abstract available.
-
Impact of surgery for stress incontinence on morbidity. Patients should be told hospital results and allowed to choose where they want surgery.BMJ. 1998 Jul 11;317(7151):143; author reply 144. BMJ. 1998. PMID: 9696610 No abstract available.
-
Impact of surgery for stress incontinence on morbidity. Treatment needs to be based on objective assessment rather than on symptoms.BMJ. 1998 Jul 11;317(7151):143-4; author reply 144. BMJ. 1998. PMID: 9696611 No abstract available.
-
Impact of surgery for stress incontinence on morbidity. Colposuspension has highest cure rates.BMJ. 1998 Jul 11;317(7151):144. BMJ. 1998. PMID: 9696612 No abstract available.
-
Impact of surgery for stress incontinence on morbidity. Pragmatic randomised trial is required.BMJ. 1998 Jul 11;317(7151):144. BMJ. 1998. PMID: 9696613 No abstract available.
Publication types
MeSH terms
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources
Medical
Miscellaneous