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Dive into the research topics where Peggy Norton is active.

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Featured researches published by Peggy Norton.


Obstetrics and Gynecology Clinics of North America | 1998

EPIDEMIOLOGY AND NATURAL HISTORY OF PELVIC FLOOR DYSFUNCTION

Richard C. Bump; Peggy Norton

Pelvic floor dysfunction, including urinary incontinence, anal incontinence, and pelvic organ prolapse, is extremely common, affecting at least one-third of adult women. A minority of patients sustaining these conditions volunteer their symptoms. Risk factor identification and the development of tactics for prevention are significant priorities for future research. Understanding both the specific predisposing factors that place an individual woman at risk and the precise events of the labor and delivery process that initiate injury and dysfunction is important for primary prevention. Defining the relative importance of various promoting and decompensating factors is essential for secondary prevention.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 2010

Retropubic versus Transobturator Midurethral Slings for Stress Incontinence

Holly E. Richter; Michael E. Albo; Halina Zyczynski; Kimberly Kenton; Peggy Norton; Larry Sirls; Stephen R. Kraus; Toby C. Chai; Gary E. Lemack; Kimberly J. Dandreo; R. Edward Varner; Shawn A. Menefee; Chiara Ghetti; Linda Brubaker; Ingrid Nygaard; Salil Khandwala; Thomas A. Rozanski; Harry W. Johnson; Joseph I. Schaffer; Anne M. Stoddard; Robert L. Holley; Charles W. Nager; Pamela Moalli; Elizabeth R. Mueller; Amy M. Arisco; Marlene M. Corton; Sharon L. Tennstedt; T. Debuene Chang; E. Ann Gormley; Heather J. Litman

BACKGROUND Midurethral slings are increasingly used for the treatment of stress incontinence, but there are limited data comparing types of slings and associated complications. METHODS We performed a multicenter, randomized equivalence trial comparing outcomes with retropubic and transobturator midurethral slings in women with stress incontinence. The primary outcome was treatment success at 12 months according to both objective criteria (a negative stress test, a negative pad test, and no retreatment) and subjective criteria (self-reported absence of symptoms, no leakage episodes recorded, and no retreatment). The predetermined equivalence margin was +/-12 percentage points. RESULTS A total of 597 women were randomly assigned to a study group; 565 (94.6%) completed the 12-month assessment. The rates of objectively assessed treatment success were 80.8% in the retropubic-sling group and 77.7% in the transobturator-sling group (3.0 percentage-point difference; 95% confidence interval [CI], -3.6 to 9.6). The rates of subjectively assessed success were 62.2% and 55.8%, respectively (6.4 percentage-point difference; 95% CI, -1.6 to 14.3). The rates of voiding dysfunction requiring surgery were 2.7% in those who received retropubic slings and 0% in those who received transobturator slings (P=0.004), and the respective rates of neurologic symptoms were 4.0% and 9.4% (P=0.01). There were no significant differences between groups in postoperative urge incontinence, satisfaction with the results of the procedure, or quality of life. CONCLUSIONS The 12-month rates of objectively assessed success of treatment for stress incontinence with the retropubic and transobturator approaches met the prespecified criteria for equivalence; the rates of subjectively assessed success were similar between groups but did not meet the criteria for equivalence. Differences in the complications associated with the two procedures should be discussed with patients who are considering surgical treatment for incontinence. (ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT00325039.)


The Lancet | 2006

Urinary incontinence in women

Peggy Norton; Linda Brubaker

Urinary incontinence is common in women, but is under-reported and under-treated. Urine storage and emptying is a complex coordination between the bladder and urethra, and disturbances in the system due to childbirth, aging, or other medical conditions can lead to urinary incontinence. The two main types of incontinence in women, stress urinary incontinence and urge urinary incontinence, can be evaluated by history and simple clinical assessment available to most primary care physicians. There is a wide range of therapeutic options, but the recent proliferation of new drug treatments and surgical devices for urinary incontinence have had mixed results; direct-to-consumer advertising has increased public awareness of the problem of urinary incontinence, but many new products are being introduced without long-term assessment of their safety and efficacy.


Obstetrics & Gynecology | 1995

Genitourinary prolapse and joint hypermobility in women

Peggy Norton; Jan Baker; Howard Sharp; James C. Warenski

Objective To determine whether joint hypermobility, a clinical marker for connective tissue abnormalities, is associated with genital prolapse. Methods One hundred seven women were recruited from a university gynecology clinic. Subjects were examined in the standing and nonstraining positions for cystocele, rectocele, and uterine or vault prolapse. The degree of prolapse was graded 0–3. A separate investigator, blinded to the results of the gynecologic examination and using accepted criteria, evaluated each subject for joint hypermobility. Results Clinical joint hypermobility was found in 39 of 107 (36%) study patients. Subjects with joint hypermobility had a significantly higher prevalence of cystocele (33 of 37 [89%] versus 40 of 69 [58%], P = .001), rectocele (32 of 38 [84%] versus 33 of 69 [48%], P = .0002), and uterine or vault prolapse (25 of 38 [66%] versus 20 of 69 [29%], P = .0002) compared to women with normal joint mobility, respectively. No differences in the prevalence of stress incontinence were found between the two groups. Conclusion Women with joint hypermobility have a significantly higher prevalence of genital prolapse compared to women with normal mobility, which suggests an underlying connective tissue abnormality as one etiology of pelvic relaxation.


American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology | 2008

Risk factors for mesh/suture erosion following sacral colpopexy

Geoffrey W. Cundiff; Edward Varner; Anthony G. Visco; Halina Zyczynski; Charles W. Nager; Peggy Norton; Joseph I. Schaffer; Morton B. Brown; Linda Brubaker

OBJECTIVE The purpose of this study was to identify risks for mesh/suture erosions following abdominal sacral colpopexy (ASC). STUDY DESIGN We analyzed demographic, perioperative variables, and erosion status in 322 participants in the Colpopexy and Urinary Reduction Efforts study 2 years after sacral colpopexy. RESULTS The predominant graft used was synthetic mesh: woven polyester (Mersilene; Ethicon, Inc, Somerville, NJ) (42%) or polypropylene (48%). Twenty subjects (6%) experienced mesh/suture erosion. Unadjusted risk factors for mesh/suture erosion were expanded polytrafluroethylene (ePTFE) mesh (ePTFE 4/21 [19%] vs non-ePTFE 16/301 [5%]; odds ratio [OR], 4.2), concurrent hysterectomy (OR, 4.9), and current smoking (OR, 5.2). Of those with mesh erosion, most affected women (13/17) underwent at least 1 surgery for partial or total mesh removal. Two were completely resolved, 6 had persistent problems, and 5 were lost to follow-up. No resolution was documented in the 4 women who elected observation. CONCLUSION Expanded PTFE mesh should not be used for sacral colpopexy. Concurrent hysterectomy and smoking are modifiable risks for mesh/suture erosion.


JAMA | 2014

Comparison of 2 Transvaginal Surgical Approaches and Perioperative Behavioral Therapy for Apical Vaginal Prolapse: The OPTIMAL Randomized Trial

Matthew D. Barber; Linda Brubaker; Kathryn L. Burgio; Holly E. Richter; Ingrid Nygaard; Alison C. Weidner; Shawn A. Menefee; Emily S. Lukacz; Peggy Norton; Joseph I. Schaffer; John N. Nguyen; Diane Borello-France; Patricia S. Goode; Sharon Jakus-Waldman; Cathie Spino; Lauren Klein Warren; Marie G. Gantz; Susan Meikle

IMPORTANCE More than 300,000 surgeries are performed annually in the United States for pelvic organ prolapse. Sacrospinous ligament fixation (SSLF) and uterosacral ligament suspension (ULS) are commonly performed transvaginal surgeries to correct apical prolapse. Little is known about their comparative efficacy and safety, and it is unknown whether perioperative behavioral therapy with pelvic floor muscle training (BPMT) improves outcomes of prolapse surgery. OBJECTIVE To compare outcomes between (1) SSLF and ULS and (2) perioperative BPMT and usual care in women undergoing surgery for vaginal prolapse and stress urinary incontinence. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS Multicenter, 2 × 2 factorial, randomized trial of 374 women undergoing surgery to treat both apical vaginal prolapse and stress urinary incontinence was conducted between 2008 and 2013 at 9 US medical centers. Two-year follow-up rate was 84.5%. INTERVENTIONS The surgical intervention was transvaginal surgery including midurethral sling with randomization to SSLF (n = 186) or ULS (n = 188); the behavioral intervention was randomization to receive perioperative BPMT (n = 186) or usual care (n = 188). MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES The primary outcome for the surgical intervention (surgical success) was defined as (1) no apical descent greater than one-third into vaginal canal or anterior or posterior vaginal wall beyond the hymen (anatomic success), (2) no bothersome vaginal bulge symptoms, and (3) no re-treatment for prolapse at 2 years. For the behavioral intervention, primary outcome at 6 months was urinary symptom scores (Urinary Distress Inventory; range 0-300, higher scores worse), and primary outcomes at 2 years were prolapse symptom scores (Pelvic Organ Prolapse Distress Inventory; range 0-300, higher scores worse) and anatomic success. RESULTS At 2 years, surgical group was not significantly associated with surgical success rates (ULS, 59.2% [93/157] vs SSLF, 60.5% [92/152]; unadjusted difference, -1.3%; 95% CI, -12.2% to 9.6%; adjusted odds ratio [OR], 0.9; 95% CI, 0.6 to 1.5) or serious adverse event rates (ULS, 16.5% [31/188] vs SSLF, 16.7% [31/186]; unadjusted difference, -0.2%; 95% CI, -7.7% to 7.4%; adjusted OR, 0.9; 95% CI, 0.5 to 1.6). Perioperative BPMT was not associated with greater improvements in urinary scores at 6 months (adjusted treatment difference, -6.7; 95% CI, -19.7 to 6.2), prolapse scores at 24 months (adjusted treatment difference, -8.0; 95% CI, -22.1 to 6.1), or anatomic success at 24 months. CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE Two years after vaginal surgery for prolapse and stress urinary incontinence, neither ULS nor SSLF was significantly superior to the other for anatomic, functional, or adverse event outcomes. Perioperative BPMT did not improve urinary symptoms at 6 months or prolapse outcomes at 2 years. TRIAL REGISTRATION clinicaltrials.gov Identifier: NCT00597935.


BJUI | 2005

A pooled analysis of three phase III studies to investigate the efficacy, tolerability and safety of darifenacin, a muscarinic M3 selective receptor antagonist, in the treatment of overactive bladder.

Christopher R. Chapple; William D. Steers; Peggy Norton; Richard J. Millard; Georg Kralidis; Karin Glavind; Paul Abrams

An international group of authors present a pooled analysis of data from their phase III multicentre double‐blind clinical trials in patients with overactive bladder, which evaluated the efficacy, tolerability and safety of darifenacin. They found the drug, a muscarinic M3 selective receptor antagonist, to be effective in the treatment of this condition, with excellent tolerability and safety.


American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology | 2011

Adverse events over two years after retropubic or transobturator midurethral sling surgery: findings from the Trial of Midurethral Slings (TOMUS) study.

Linda Brubaker; Peggy Norton; Michael E. Albo; Toby C. Chai; Kimberly J. Dandreo; Keith Lloyd; Jerry L. Lowder; Larry Sirls; Gary E. Lemack; Amy M. Arisco; Yan Xu; John W. Kusek

OBJECTIVE To describe surgical complications in 597 women over a 24-month period after randomization to retropubic or transobturator midurethral slings. STUDY DESIGN During the Trial of Midurethral Slings study, the Data Safety Monitoring Board regularly reviewed summary reports of all adverse events using the Dindo Surgical Complication Scale. Logistic regression models were created to explore associations between clinicodemographic factors and surgical complications. RESULTS A total of 383 adverse events were observed among 253 of the 597 women (42%). Seventy-five adverse events (20%) were classified as serious (serious adverse events); occurring in 70 women. Intraoperative bladder perforation (15 events) occurred exclusively in the retropubic group. Neurologic adverse events were more common in the transobturator group than in retropubic (32 events vs 20 events, respectively). Twenty-three (4%) women experienced mesh complications, including delayed presentations, in both groups. CONCLUSION Adverse events vary by procedure, but are common after midurethral sling. Most events resolve without significant sequelae.


Obstetrics & Gynecology | 2003

Mixed urinary incontinence symptoms: urodynamic findings, incontinence severity, and treatment response

Richard C. Bump; Peggy Norton; Norman Zinner; Ilker Yalcin

OBJECTIVE To investigate the relationship between the symptom of mixed urinary incontinence and incontinence severity, urodynamic findings, and treatment response. METHODS This is a secondary analysis of data from 553 women randomized into a double-blind, placebo-controlled study evaluating duloxetine (serotonin–norepi-nephrine reuptake inhibitor) for the treatment of predominant stress urinary incontinence. Assessment variables included incontinent episode frequency, the Incontinence Quality of Life Questionnaire (I-QOL), and the Patient Global Impression of Severity Scale (PGI-S). Urge symptoms were identified with three urge I-QOL questions not included in corrected I-QOL calculations. RESULTS At baseline, 171 women (31%) had mixed urinary incontinence. They had more severe baseline urinary incontinence than did those with stress urinary incontinence (mean incontinent episode frequency 14.3 versus 10.5; PGI-S normal or mild 26.5% versus 70.4%; mean corrected I-QOL 59.1 versus 79.9; all Ps < .001). Baseline urodynamics were performed on a subset of 86 women. Subjects with both urodynamic stress incontinence and detrusor overactivity had less severe incontinence compared with subjects with only urodynamic stress incontinence. Both mixed urinary incontinence and stress urinary incontinence groups had significant decreases in median incontinent episode frequency at a 40 mg per day (62% and 58%, respectively) and 80 mg per day (63% and 65%) duloxetine dose compared with placebo (33% and 44%; all Ps < .05). Response was not dependent on the type of symptoms (interaction P = .47). CONCLUSION For women presenting with predominant stress urinary incontinence symptoms, the major determinant of concurrent urge symptoms was incontinence severity and not the pathophysiologic condition(s) causing the incontinence; duloxetine demonstrated equal efficacy for women with mixed urinary incontinence and pure stress urinary incontinence.


Obstetrical & Gynecological Survey | 2014

Comparison of 2 transvaginal surgical approaches and perioperative behavioral therapy for apical vaginal prolapse: The OPTIMAL randomized trial

Matthew D. Barber; Linda Brubaker; Kathryn L. Burgio; Holly E. Richter; Ingrid Nygaard; Alison C. Weidner; Shawn A. Menefee; Emily S. Lukacz; Peggy Norton; Joseph I. Schaffer; John N. Nguyen; Diane Borello-France; Patricia S. Goode; Sharon Jakus-Waldman; Cathie Spino; Lauren Klein Warren; Marie G. Gantz; Susan Meikle

IMPORTANCE More than 300,000 surgeries are performed annually in the United States for pelvic organ prolapse. Sacrospinous ligament fixation (SSLF) and uterosacral ligament suspension (ULS) are commonly performed transvaginal surgeries to correct apical prolapse. Little is known about their comparative efficacy and safety, and it is unknown whether perioperative behavioral therapy with pelvic floor muscle training (BPMT) improves outcomes of prolapse surgery. OBJECTIVE To compare outcomes between (1) SSLF and ULS and (2) perioperative BPMT and usual care in women undergoing surgery for vaginal prolapse and stress urinary incontinence. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS Multicenter, 2 × 2 factorial, randomized trial of 374 women undergoing surgery to treat both apical vaginal prolapse and stress urinary incontinence was conducted between 2008 and 2013 at 9 US medical centers. Two-year follow-up rate was 84.5%. INTERVENTIONS The surgical intervention was transvaginal surgery including midurethral sling with randomization to SSLF (n = 186) or ULS (n = 188); the behavioral intervention was randomization to receive perioperative BPMT (n = 186) or usual care (n = 188). MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES The primary outcome for the surgical intervention (surgical success) was defined as (1) no apical descent greater than one-third into vaginal canal or anterior or posterior vaginal wall beyond the hymen (anatomic success), (2) no bothersome vaginal bulge symptoms, and (3) no re-treatment for prolapse at 2 years. For the behavioral intervention, primary outcome at 6 months was urinary symptom scores (Urinary Distress Inventory; range 0-300, higher scores worse), and primary outcomes at 2 years were prolapse symptom scores (Pelvic Organ Prolapse Distress Inventory; range 0-300, higher scores worse) and anatomic success. RESULTS At 2 years, surgical group was not significantly associated with surgical success rates (ULS, 59.2% [93/157] vs SSLF, 60.5% [92/152]; unadjusted difference, -1.3%; 95% CI, -12.2% to 9.6%; adjusted odds ratio [OR], 0.9; 95% CI, 0.6 to 1.5) or serious adverse event rates (ULS, 16.5% [31/188] vs SSLF, 16.7% [31/186]; unadjusted difference, -0.2%; 95% CI, -7.7% to 7.4%; adjusted OR, 0.9; 95% CI, 0.5 to 1.6). Perioperative BPMT was not associated with greater improvements in urinary scores at 6 months (adjusted treatment difference, -6.7; 95% CI, -19.7 to 6.2), prolapse scores at 24 months (adjusted treatment difference, -8.0; 95% CI, -22.1 to 6.1), or anatomic success at 24 months. CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE Two years after vaginal surgery for prolapse and stress urinary incontinence, neither ULS nor SSLF was significantly superior to the other for anatomic, functional, or adverse event outcomes. Perioperative BPMT did not improve urinary symptoms at 6 months or prolapse outcomes at 2 years. TRIAL REGISTRATION clinicaltrials.gov Identifier: NCT00597935.

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Linda Brubaker

Loyola University Chicago

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Stephen R. Kraus

University of Texas at San Antonio

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Holly E. Richter

University of Alabama at Birmingham

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Gary E. Lemack

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

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Anne M. Stoddard

University of Massachusetts Amherst

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