Clinical Inquiries

What is the best nonsurgical therapy for pelvic organ prolapse?

Author and Disclosure Information

 

References

EVIDENCE-BASED ANSWER:

Pelvic floor muscle training (PFMT) and pessaries are equally effective in treating symptoms of pelvic organ prolapse (POP). PFMT transiently improves patient satisfaction and reduces urinary incontinence more than pessaries do (strength of recommendation [SOR]: B, a randomized controlled trial [RCT]).

PFMT moderately improves prolapse symptoms and severity, especially following 6 months of supervised intervention (SOR: B, a systematic review of randomized trials with some methodologic flaws).

Two pessaries (ring with support and Gellhorn) reduce symptoms in as many as 60% of patients (SOR: B, a systematic review of randomized trials).


Untreated postmenopausal women with mild grades of uterine prolapse are unlikely to develop more severe prolapse; 25% to 50% improve spontaneously (SOR: C, a prospective cohort study with methodologic flaws).

EVIDENCE SUMMARY

A 2010 multicenter RCT with 445 women (mean age 49.8 years) compared PFMT, pessary use, and combined treatment.1 Investigators used the Patient Global Impression of Improvement and the stress incontinence subscale of the Pelvic Floor Distress Inventory to measure patient satisfaction and urinary incontinence symptoms.

At 3 months, equivalent numbers of women using PFMT and a pessary (49% and 40%, respectively; P=.09) reported they were “much better” or “very much better.” More women in the PFMT cohort than women using a pessary reported resolution of incontinence symptoms at 3 months (49% vs 33%; P=.006), and satisfaction with treatment (75% vs 63%; P=.02), but these differences disappeared at 12 months. Combination therapy wasn’t superior to PFMT alone.

Pelvic floor muscle training improves symptoms, especially with perseverance

A 2011 Cochrane review that compared women receiving PFMT with a control group (observed but not treated) found that PFMT moderately improved prolapse symptoms and severity, especially following 6 months of supervised intervention.2 Investigators evalu-ated 4 trials, (N=857), including 3 with fewer than 25 women per arm.

Pages

Evidence-based answers from the Family Physicians Inquiries Network

Recommended Reading

Bariatric surgery results may include improved sexual function for female patients
MDedge Family Medicine
Women are not seeking care for urinary incontinence, and physicians can be a barrier
MDedge Family Medicine
Early low-dose menopausal hormone therapy did not affect atherosclerosis
MDedge Family Medicine
Fertility treatment was associated with limited cancer risks
MDedge Family Medicine
Prenatal exposure to alcohol can result in persistent difficulties with math
MDedge Family Medicine
Suctioning neonates at birth: Time to change our approach
MDedge Family Medicine
Only weak link seen between gestational pesticide exposure and gastroschisis
MDedge Family Medicine
Recent use of oral contraceptives linked to breast cancer
MDedge Family Medicine
Early ID of placenta accreta key to optimal management
MDedge Family Medicine
More newborns breastfeeding, says latest CDC report card
MDedge Family Medicine