International Urogynecology Journal | 2021

Association of Pelvic Organ Prolapse Quantification examination D point with uterosacral ligament suspension outcomes: the “OPTIMAL” D point

 
 
 
 
 
 

Abstract


The objective was to determine the relationship between the preoperative D-point and apical outcomes at 24 months, using the Operations and Pelvic Muscle Training in the Management of Apical Support Loss (OPTIMAL) dataset. This was a secondary analysis of the OPTIMAL trial, a randomized multi-centered study comparing outcomes of sacrospinous ligament fixation and transvaginal uterosacral ligament suspension (USLS). The 2-year dataset utilized included women undergoing USLS with concomitant hysterectomy. The primary outcome was the relationship between preoperative D-point and apical outcomes at 24 months. Secondary objectives were to determine the relationship between preoperative D-point and anatomical, composite and subjective outcomes, and to determine a D-point cut-off that could be used to predict success in each of these categories. Of the 186 women in the USLS arm, 120 were available for analysis of anatomical failure at 24 months. A higher preoperative D-point correlated with improved apical outcome (C-point) at 24 months (r\u2009=\u20090.34; p value\u2009=\u20090.0002). Using ROC curves, a moderate association was found between the preoperative D-point and apical and anatomical success, (AUC 0.689 and 0.662). There was no relationship between preoperative D-point and composite or subjective success (AUC 0.577 and 0.458). Based on the ROC curves, a “cut-off” D-point value of −4.25 cm (sensitivity\u2009=\u20090.58, specificity\u2009=\u20090.67) was determined to be a predictor of postoperative anatomical success at 2 years. Preoperative D-point correlates with postoperative anatomical and apical support, but is less successful at predicting subjective outcomes. The strongest predictive D-point cut-off for anatomical and apical success at 24 months was −4.25 cm.

Volume 32
Pages 2179 - 2184
DOI 10.1007/s00192-021-04687-0
Language English
Journal International Urogynecology Journal

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