# Twelve‐Year Follow‐Up of a Randomised Controlled Trial Comparing the Effectiveness of Pelvic Floor Muscle Training Versus Mid‐Urethral Sling Surgery for Female Moderate to Severe Urinary Incontinence

**Authors:** Hélène F. C. van Oorschot, Deodata Tijsseling, Julien Labrie, Carl H. van der Vaart

PMC · DOI: 10.1111/1471-0528.18092 · Bjog · 2025-02-11

## TL;DR

A 12-year study found that mid-urethral sling surgery was more effective than pelvic floor muscle training for treating moderate to severe female urinary incontinence.

## Contribution

This study provides long-term evidence on the effectiveness of mid-urethral sling surgery versus pelvic floor muscle training for stress urinary incontinence.

## Key findings

- A high crossover rate occurred from pelvic floor muscle training to surgery.
- Mid-urethral sling surgery showed better subjective improvement and cure rates compared to physiotherapy.
- Re-operation was reported by 4.6% of women who underwent surgery.

## Abstract

To compare the 12‐year effectiveness of pelvic floor muscle training versus midurethral sling surgery for moderate to severe female stress urinary incontinence.

Observational follow‐up study of a randomised controlled trial.

Conducted at the Division of Gynaecology, University Medical Centre Utrecht, The Netherlands.

Women from the PORTRET study experiencing moderate to severe stress urinary incontinence.

A validated questionnaire was sent to participants.

The primary outcome was subjective improvement in urinary incontinence symptoms. Secondary outcomes included subjective cure, severity of incontinence, impact of incontinence as urogenital symptom and cross‐over and re‐operation rates.

In this long‐term study, 184 of 386 (47.7%) women responded to the questionnaire. Cross‐over (86.9%) from the initial physiotherapy group to surgery was very high. No statistically significant differences were found in the intention to treat analysis. However, the post hoc analysis showed that women who underwent physiotherapy only reported a statistically significant lower improvement compared to those who underwent initial surgery (50.6% absolute difference; 95% CI 28.2–73.1) or surgery after physiotherapy (49.7% absolute difference; 95% CI 25.8–73.7). Subjective cure, decrease in perceived severity and impact of urinary incontinence also statistically significantly favoured women who underwent (initial) surgery Re‐operation was reported by 4.6% of women.

This 12‐year follow‐up study showed a very high cross‐over rate to surgical treatment, considering a substantial proportion of non‐responders. Midurethral sling surgery, either initial or after physiotherapy, statistically significantly improved subjective outcomes for moderate to severe stress urinary incontinence as compared to pelvic floor muscle physiotherapy only in the long‐term.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** stress urinary incontinence (MESH:D014550), urogenital symptom (MESH:D000091642), Urinary Incontinence (MESH:D014549)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## References

25 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11969909/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11969909