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Clinical Trials/NCT02101489
NCT02101489
Completed
Not Applicable

Precise Transvaginal Tape Placement Trial

Loyola University1 site in 1 country56 target enrollmentMarch 2014

Overview

Phase
Not Applicable
Intervention
Not specified
Conditions
Stress Urinary Incontinence
Sponsor
Loyola University
Enrollment
56
Locations
1
Primary Endpoint
If using a Foley catheter is a reliable way to measure the urethral length before placing the tension free vaginal tape in the mid-urethra.
Status
Completed
Last Updated
9 years ago

Overview

Brief Summary

This purpose of this study is to study is to see if intra-operative urethral length measurement with the Foley catheter will improve the placement of a synthetic sling in the mid-urethra.

Detailed Description

This study will assess the effect of intraoperative measurement of the urethral length with the Foley catheter in optimization of sling placement in the mid female urethra. Of note, the Foley catheter is well-tolerated, placed routinely during surgery to drain the bladder and has no complications associated with it. Women who have chosen to undergo trans-vaginal tape sling (TVT) for stress urinary incontinence will be asked to enroll in this randomized trial by the study team during their clinic visit. Randomization will be performed by the FPMRS study nurse coordinator after a woman has given her informed consent and meets the study criteria. Twenty women will be randomized to undergo measurement of the urethral length by marking the Foley catheter at the urethral meatus when it is placed at the start of the surgical case. When the catheter is removed, the length from the end of the Foley balloon to the marking at the urethra will be measured as urethral length, the mid urethral point will then be determined by dividing the urethral length be two where the incision of sling placement will be made and twenty women will have our usual pre-operative assessment (which does not include intraoperative measurement of the urethral length with the Foley catheter) for the treatment of symptomatic stress urinary incontinence All women participating in the study will receive an intra-operative 3-D trans-vaginal ultrasound (BK Flex Focus ultrasound with the 8838 transvaginal probe). The image will be stored and reviewed for; urethral length, urethral sphincter complex length and width. All women in the study will have an ultrasound at the end of their surgical procedure and a follow-up ultrasound at 2 weeks post operatively to assess for sling migration. Of note, transvaginal ultrasound is well-tolerated and has no complications associated with it. All ultrasound measurements will be done by a four qualified surgeons, Dr. Elizabeth Mueller Dr. Ahmed Akl, Dr. Tanaka Dune, and Dr. Susanne Taege who have been trained on ultrasound measurements. In addition, women will complete questionnaires assessing their pelvic floor symptoms pre-operatively and at 2 week following surgery. Instruments used will be the Pelvic Floor Disorders Inventory (PFDI), Medical Epidemiologic and Social Aging (MESA) and the Patient Global Impression of Improvement (PGII) \[11, 12\].

Registry
clinicaltrials.gov
Start Date
March 2014
End Date
November 2016
Last Updated
9 years ago
Study Type
Interventional
Study Design
Parallel
Sex
Female

Investigators

Sponsor
Loyola University
Responsible Party
Principal Investigator
Principal Investigator

Elizabeth Mueller

M.D., Associate Professor

Loyola University

Eligibility Criteria

Inclusion Criteria

  • Candidates for TVT
  • \>=18 years of age to participate

Exclusion Criteria

  • Inability to give informed consent
  • Previous SUI(stress urinary incontinence) treatment including TVT, Burch or urethral bulking agents
  • Previous bladder, urethral malignancies or vaginal/pelvic radiation treatment.
  • Pregnant women cannot participate

Outcomes

Primary Outcomes

If using a Foley catheter is a reliable way to measure the urethral length before placing the tension free vaginal tape in the mid-urethra.

Time Frame: 2 weeks

measurement of the urethral length by marking the Foley catheter at the urethral meatus when it is placed at the start of the surgical case. When the catheter is removed, the length from the end of the Foley balloon to the marking at the urethra will be measured as urethral length, the mid urethral point will then be determined by dividing the urethral length be two where the incision of sling placement will be made.

Secondary Outcomes

  • Comparing urethral length measurement with the Foley catheter and 3D ultrasound.(2 weeks)
  • Location change of mid-urethral slings from the time of surgery to 2 weeks after surgery.(2 weeks)
  • Stratify the data based on patient race, BMI, prolapse and age(6 weeks)

Study Sites (1)

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