# Laparoscopic Resection Rectopexy with Transanal Specimen Extraction for Complete Rectal Prolapse: Retrospective Cohort Study of Functional Outcomes

**Authors:** Mustafa Ates, Sami Akbulut, Emrah Sahin, Kemal Baris Sarici, Ertugrul Karabulut, Mukadder Sanli

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/jcm15020718 · Journal of Clinical Medicine · 2026-01-15

## TL;DR

This study evaluates the effectiveness of a minimally invasive surgery for rectal prolapse, showing significant improvements in bowel function over time.

## Contribution

The study provides new evidence on functional outcomes of laparoscopic resection rectopexy with transanal specimen extraction for rectal prolapse.

## Key findings

- Obstructed defecation syndrome scores improved significantly from preoperative to 12 months post-surgery.
- LARS scores decreased over time, indicating better bowel function recovery.
- Wexner incontinence scores showed initial worsening but improved by 6 months post-surgery.

## Abstract

Background: Complete rectal prolapse (RP) is a debilitating pelvic floor disorder often accompanied by obstructed defecation syndrome (ODS), fecal incontinence, and LARS-like bowel dysfunction. Laparoscopic resection rectopexy (LRR) is an established abdominal approach; however, functional outcomes after LRR with transanal specimen extraction (LRR-TSE) are incompletely defined. Aim: To evaluate short- and long-term functional outcomes—ODS, Wexner incontinence score (WIS), and LARS—in patients undergoing LRR-TSE. Methods: This single-center cohort included 53 consecutive patients who underwent LRR-TSE between January 2013 and December 2019. Variables were prospectively recorded and analyzed retrospectively. ODS, WIS, and LARS scores were assessed preoperatively and at 3, 6, and 12 months. Longitudinal changes were analyzed using repeated-measures ANOVA with Greenhouse–Geisser correction, polynomial contrasts when appropriate, and Bonferroni-adjusted pairwise comparisons. Results: ODS improved significantly over time (p < 0.001), decreasing from 12.8 ± 3.2 preoperatively to 2.4 ± 2.1, 4.2 ± 2.2, and 5.2 ± 2.9 at 3, 6, and 12 months, respectively. LARS scores declined from 18.0 ± 12.7 at 3 months to 8.8 ± 6.8 at 6 months and 3.5 ± 4.2 at 12 months (p < 0.001). WIS showed a transient increase at 3 months (8.1 ± 5.2), followed by improvement at 6 and 12 months (3.2 ± 3.7 and 2.4 ± 3.0; p < 0.001). Sex and body mass index did not affect functional trajectories (p > 0.05), whereas patients aged ≥50 years had higher postoperative LARS and WIS scores (p < 0.05). Complications occurred in 5 patients (9.43%), including one anastomotic leak with a mortality rate of 1.85%. Full-thickness recurrence occurred in 2 patients (3.77%), and 3 developed mucosal prolapse managed with Delorme’s procedure. Conclusions: LRR-TSE is a safe and feasible minimally invasive technique that improves constipation, continence, and LARS-related bowel dysfunction. Early postoperative impairment may overestimate long-term functional severity, highlighting the need for follow-up beyond 12 months.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** rectal prolapse (MONDO:0004754)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** pelvic floor disorder (MESH:D059952), incontinence (MESH:D014549), fecal incontinence (MESH:D005242), RP (MESH:D012005), constipation (MESH:D003248), ODS (MESH:D000402), bowel dysfunction (MESH:D015212), mucosal prolapse (MESH:D011391), anastomotic leak (MESH:D057868)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

6 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12842517/full.md

## References

76 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12842517/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12842517