Medicine

Urethral Morphology and Support Associated with Urinary Symptoms after Vaginal Surgery with and without Midurethral Sling

AI Insight

This study examined how vaginal prolapse repair, with or without a midurethral sling, affects urethral shape, position, and mobility, and how these characteristics relate to urinary symptoms in 82 women followed for approximately 30 to 42 months post-surgery. Using MRI-derived three-dimensional urethral models, researchers found that women who received a concurrent midurethral sling had larger urethral dimensions, better bladder neck support, a straighter urethral shape, and reported less bothersome stress urinary incontinence than those without a sling. Across the full cohort, poorer urinary outcomes were associated with shorter urethral length, a more posterior-inferior urethral position, increased urethral curvature, and reduced urethral mobility during strain.


Understanding how urethral morphology relates to continence outcomes after pelvic floor surgery could help surgeons better anticipate and address incontinence risks, potentially guiding more individualized decisions about whether to include a midurethral sling during prolapse repair. These findings may contribute to improved surgical planning and patient counseling for women undergoing transvaginal procedures.


⚠️ Preprint – Noch nicht peer-reviewed

Dieser Artikel wurde noch nicht von unabhängigen Experten begutachtet. Die Ergebnisse sind vorläufig und sollten mit Vorsicht interpretiert werden.

Background: Midurethral sling placement is often performed during prolapse repair to treat or prevent stress urinary incontinence. However, some women experience persistent or new-onset stress or urgency urinary incontinence after surgery. It is unclear how prolapse repair, with or without a concomitant midurethral sling, alters urethral morphology and support, and how these changes relate to urinary continence outcomes. Objectives: To compare postoperative urethral morphology (dimensions, angles, shape) and support (position, mobility) after transvaginal prolapse repair with vs without a concurrent midurethral sling, and to explore associations between postoperative urethral characteristics and urinary outcomes (stress, urgency symptoms). Study Design: This ancillary analysis used magnetic resonance imaging and urinary outcome data from the Defining Mechanisms of Anterior Vaginal Wall Descent Study conducted across 8 clinical sites within the United States Pelvic Floor Disorders Network. Eighty-two women (median age, 65 years) underwent transvaginal prolapse repair (vaginal mesh hysteropexy or vaginal hysterectomy with uterosacral ligament suspension) with or without a concurrent midurethral sling between April 2013 and February 2015. Postoperative imaging at rest and during strain was performed 30-42 months after surgery (or earlier if they chose reoperation) between June 2014 and May 2018. Prolapse recurrence, defined as descent beyond the vaginal introitus during strain, was recorded. The urethra was segmented from postoperative scans to create 3-dimensional models for measuring urethral diameters, length, surface area, volume, angles, shape (principal component scores from a statistical shape model), position, and mobility (rest-to-strain displacement). Preoperative and 24-48-month postoperative urinary continence outcomes were assessed using validated questionnaires: the Urogenital Distress Inventory, Urinary Impact Questionnaire, and the Incontinence Severity Index. Comparisons of urethral and urinary outcomes by (1) midurethral sling and (2) stress urinary incontinence were made using Wilcoxon rank-sum tests, principal component analysis, and multivariate models as appropriate. Associations between urethral and urinary outcomes were evaluated with Spearmans rank correlation. Results: Forty-six women (22 hysteropexy, 24 hysterectomy) were in the sling group, and 36 (19 hysteropexy, 17 hysterectomy) were in the no-sling group. Among the 48 women without prolapse recurrence (28 sling, 20 no-sling), those with a sling (vs without) had larger urethral dimensions (all P<.03), a more anterior-superior position of the proximal urethra (indicating better bladder neck support) (P=.04), a straighter urethral shape (P=.006), and reported less bothersome postoperative stress incontinence (P=.02). Overall, 14 women (17%) experienced postoperative stress incontinence. Stress urinary incontinence was linked to a more acute proximal urethral sagittal angle (more aligned with axial plane) (P=.01), and a lower proximal urethra position (P=.04) and mid-urethra position (P=.03). Poorer stress and urgency urinary outcomes were associated with a shorter urethral length (P=.01), a more posterior-inferior urethral position (all P<.05), increased C or S-shaped urethral concavity (P=.008; P=.006), and smaller rest-to-strain displacement of the proximal (P=.03) and distal (P=.009) urethra. Conclusions: Urethral morphology and support differed with concomitant midurethral sling (vs no sling) and stress urinary incontinence after vaginal surgery. Urethral characteristics were also associated with postoperative urinary symptoms. Urethral configuration may influence urinary outcomes and could be considered during prolapse and stress urinary incontinence repairs.

Source: Urethral Morphology and Support Associated with Urinary Symptoms after Vaginal Surgery with and without Midurethral Sling