Abstract

The mid-urethral sling (MUS) procedure is the most common treatment modality for women with stress urinary incontinence (SUI). Although this procedure is highly successful, 5-20% of patients undergoing MUS experience persistent or recurrent SUI, regarded as surgical failure. However, little is known about methods to evaluate and manage patients who fail MUS procedures. The surgical options in these patients include bulking agent injection, shortening of pre-implanted tape, pubovaginal sling and repeat MUS. Of these secondary procedures, repeat MUS is the most widely studied, although this has been limited to small case series without long-term follow-up. Repeat MUS for prior MUS failure has shown relatively good success rates, ranging from 55 to 90%, with better outcomes obtained using the retropubic rather than the transobturator route. Persistent or recurrent SUI may also be successfully managed with less invasive techniques, such as tape shortening and periurethral injection of a bulking agent. Transurethral injection therapy for primary SUI has shown success rates of more than 65% at 1 year; however, these decreased significantly thereafter to around 30% at long-term follow-up. Since the optimal management of recurrent or persistent SUI after MUS has not yet been established, long-term, prospective, randomized trials are warranted.

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