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Title: Laparoscopic paravaginal repair of anterior compartment prolapse. Author: Behnia-Willison F, Seman EI, Cook JR, O'Shea RT, Keirse MJ. Journal: J Minim Invasive Gynecol; 2007; 14(4):475-80. PubMed ID: 17630166. Abstract: STUDY OBJECTIVE: To assess the results of laparovaginal repair of anterior vaginal prolapse in terms of perioperative morbidity and repair durability. DESIGN: Longitudinal study of a consecutive series of women assessed with the pelvic organ prolapse quantification (POPQ) system before and after laparoscopic paravaginal repair of anterior vaginal prolapse (Canadian Task Force classification II-2). SETTING: University hospital in South Australia. PATIENTS: Two hundred twelve women undergoing laparoscopic paravaginal repair for anterior compartment prolapse, with average follow-up of 14.2 months and 10 (4.7%) lost to follow-up. INTERVENTIONS: All women underwent bilateral laparoscopic paravaginal repair that was combined with uterosacral hysteropexy or colpopexy in women with concomitant level I defects (n = 42) and supralevator repair in those with posterior fascia defects (n = 47). Recurrences were treated with graft-reinforced anterior colporrhaphy (n = 18). MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS: Nine women (4.2%) had major complications, and there were 61 minor complications. The POPQ assessment on follow-up (mean 14.2 months) gave a prolapse cure of the laparoscopic repair of 76% (95% CI 70.7%-82.1%). Eighteen of 23 women with a residual central defect subsequently had a graft-reinforced anterior colporrhaphy, after a mean interval of 14 months, which increased the cure rate to 84% (95% CI 79.6%-89.3%). CONCLUSION: Laparoscopic paravaginal repair followed by graft-reinforced anterior colporrhaphy for central defects, when necessary, is associated with a low morbidity rate and achieves an anatomic cure rate greater than 80%.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]