Abstract

To report the outcome of the ADRESU study, a multicenter, single-arm, investigator-initiated clinical trial to confirm the efficacy and safety of regenerative treatment for male patients with stress urinary incontinence. The participants were male patients with mild-to-moderate stress urinary incontinence persisting for >1year after prostatectomy. Autologous adipose-derived regenerative cells were isolated using the Celution system from adipose tissue obtained by liposuction. Adipose-derived regenerative cells and mixture of adipose-derived regenerative cells with adipose tissue were transurethrally injected into the rhabdosphincter and submucosal space of the urethra, respectively. The primary end-point was the proportion of patients with improvement of the urine leakage volume at 52weeks (or last visit within 52weeks). Improvement of leakage volume was defined as a decrease from baseline >50% by the 24-h pad test. A total of 10 secondary end-points were set. A total of 45 patients satisfying the eligibility criteria were enrolled. The primary end-point was met; the proportion of patients with improvement in leakage volume at 52weeks was 37.2% (95% confidence interval 23.0-53.3%). No serious adverse events with causal relationships to the adipose-derived regenerative cells were encountered. There was a progressive improvement in secondary end-points. In the King's Health Questionnaire, improvement of quality of life scores showed greater improvement in responders, as compared with non-responders. Findings from the ADRESU study suggest the efficacy and safety of regenerative treatment for male patients with mild-to-moderate stress urinary incontinence.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call