Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
3901190 Urology 2010 5 Pages PDF
Abstract

ObjectiveTo evaluate prospectively the complication rate of the retrourethral transobturator sling (AdVance sling) for the functional treatment of male stress urinary incontinence (SUI).MethodsIn 230 patients with SUI due to nonintrinsic sphincter deficiency (without direct sphincter lesion) after radical prostatectomy (n = 213), radical cystoprostatectomy with ileal neobladder (n = 2) and transurethral resection of the prostate (n = 15) a retrourethral transobturator sling was implanted. Patients were followed up for a median of 17 months (range, 4-42 months) with regard to intraoperative, early postoperative, and midterm postoperative complications.ResultsOverall complication rate of the AdVance sling was 23.9%. Despite one accidental sling misplacement, no intraoperative complication occurred. Forty-nine patients (21.3%) experienced urinary retention postsurgery. Two slings were explanted (0.9%), 1 due to initial wrong placement and the other due to a symphysitis, attributed to a Guillain-Barré syndrome and not to a sling infection. One sling was transected (0.4%) due to slippage of the sling with obstruction of the urethra. Further complications were local wound infection (0.4%), urinary infection with fever (0.4%), and persistent moderate perineal pain (0.4%). There was no correlation between postoperative acute urinary retention and age at sling implantation, time of incontinence before sling implantation, preoperative daily pad use, or prior invasive incontinence treatment, respectively.ConclusionsThe retrourethral transobturator AdVance sling is a safe treatment option for male nonintrinsic sphincter deficiency SUI, with the main postoperative complication being transient acute urinary retention. Severe intra- and postoperative complications are rare and sling explantation rate is very low.

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Health Sciences Medicine and Dentistry Nephrology
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