MedPath

Can Pelvic Floor Muscle Training Reduce my Prolapse

Not Applicable
Completed
Conditions
Pelvic Organ Prolapse
Interventions
Behavioral: Lifestyle advice
Behavioral: Pelvic floor muscle training and lifestyle advice
Registration Number
NCT01612637
Lead Sponsor
Copenhagen University Hospital at Herlev
Brief Summary

Purpose The aim of this study is to examine if a structured pelvic floor muscle training combined with lifestyle advice with can improve pelvic organ prolapse (POP) symptoms more than structured lifestyle advice programme alone.

Background Pelvic organ prolapse (POP) is a common condition among adult women and almost one in ten women experience symptoms caused by POP. The key symptom of POP is seeing or feeling a bulge in the vaginal opening but POP often gives other symptoms, such as pain, difficulty emptying the bladder or the bowel, incontinence and sexual problems such as dyspareunia.

A majority of women with POP will be offered reconstructive surgery but the risk of reoperations is substantial and surgery may cause new symptoms. In one out of four women surgery does not relieve symptoms and the women have been exposed to unnecessary risk of complications.

It is therefore important to evaluate the effect of conservative treatments for POP. New studies have shown that pelvic floor muscle training offered in combination with lifestyle advice has a significant on POP symptoms and objective measures of POP compared to a lifestyle advice leaflet alone.

No studies have compared the effect of a combined pelvic floor muscle training and lifestyle advice programme with a structured programme of lifestyle advice and hypothetically the structured lifestyle advice programme could have a substantial effect on its own. Our hypothesis is that the pelvic floor muscle training is a vital component of a conservative treatment for POP.

Methods In this single-blind randomised controlled study women with POP will randomised to either a programme of structured pelvic floor muscle training combined with lifestyle advice or a structured lifestyle advice programme alone. Both groups will receive the same lifestyle advices through six (separate) lectures within 12 weeks. The training group will be examined and individually instructed in pelvic floor muscle training before the intervention starts and they will, in continuation with their lifestyle lectures, perform pelvic floor muscle training as group training

Detailed Description

Not available

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
Female
Target Recruitment
108
Inclusion Criteria
  • ≥18 years of age female reporting bothersome symptoms of any type of POP
  • Newly referred to the hospital clinic
  • Prolapse ≥II POP-Q
  • Understand and write Danish
Exclusion Criteria
  • Instruction in pelvic floor muscle training within the last two years
  • Dementia
  • Pregnancy or less than one year postnatal
  • Disorders that can affect ability to participate in the intervention such as neurological or psychiatric disorders

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Group 2Lifestyle adviceGroup 2 attend six group sessions within 12 weeks containing structured information about POP and the possible affection of POP on quality of life, exercising and sexual relationship. The lifestyle advice contains information about life style changes that could improve POP symptoms, such as bladder and bowel habits, coughing, heavy lifting, eating habits and weight loss
Group 1Pelvic floor muscle training and lifestyle adviceGroup 1 will be individually examined and instructed in pelvic floor muscle training before the intervention starts by specialized physiotherapists. The examination includes a vaginal or an anal examination. The women attend six group sessions within 12 weeks containing structured information about POP and the possible affection of POP on quality of life, exercising and sexual relationship. The lifestyle advice contains information about life style changes that could improve POP symptoms, such as bladder and bowel habits, coughing, heavy lifting, eating habits and weight loss. The women will perform pelvic floor muscle training in the group and they will perform pelvic floor muscle training at home. The training will be individually planned according to the findings of the pelvic floor physiotherapist. The women in the intervention group fill in an exercise diary and also describe on a Visual Analog Scale if the training causes any bother.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Patient Global Index of Improvement scale (PGI-I)three months after ended intervention
Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Background variablesAt time of inclusion

age, parity, BMI, working status as predictors of effect of the intervention

Size of levator hiatus and presence of levator ani avulsions examined through transperineal ultrasoundAt time of inclusion

as predictors of effect of the intervention

Cost-effectiveness12 months after ended intervention

Need for further treatment and calculation of economic costs for both interventions compared to number of surgeries avoided will be evaluated

Patient Global Index of Improvement scale (PGI-I)Right after ended intervention and 12 months after ended intervention
Objective pelvic organ prolapse measured with the pelvic organ prolapse Quantification system (POP-Q)before, right after, three and 12 months after the intervention has ended
Pelvic Floor Distress Inventory - short form 20 (PFDI-20)right after, three months and 12 months after ended intervention

Validated condition-specific questionnaire

Pelvic Floor Impact Questionnaire - short form 7 (PFIQ-7)right after, three months and 12 months after ended intervention

Validated condition-specific questionnaire

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Copenhagen University Hospital at Herlev

🇩🇰

Copenhagen, Denmark

© Copyright 2025. All Rights Reserved by MedPath