Pessaries (mechanical devices) for managing pelvic organ prolapse in women

Abstract

Background

Pelvic organ prolapse is a common problem in women. About 40% of women will experience prolapse in their lifetime, with the proportion expected to rise in line with an ageing population. Women experience a variety of troublesome symptoms as a consequence of prolapse, including a feeling of 'something coming down' into the vagina, pain, urinary symptoms, bowel symptoms and sexual difficulties. Treatment for prolapse includes surgery, pelvic floor muscle training (PFMT) and vaginal pessaries. Vaginal pessaries are passive mechanical devices designed to support the vagina and hold the prolapsed organs back in the anatomically correct position. The most commonly used pessaries are made from polyvinyl‐chloride, polythene, silicone or latex. Pessaries are frequently used by clinicians with high numbers of clinicians offering a pessary as first‐line treatment for prolapse. 

This is an update of a Cochrane Review first published in 2003 and last published in 2013.

Objectives

To assess the effects of pessaries (mechanical devices) for managing pelvic organ prolapse in women; and summarise the principal findings of relevant economic evaluations of this intervention.

Search methods

We searched the Cochrane Incontinence Specialised Register which contains trials identified from the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (CENTRAL), MEDLINE, MEDLINE In‐Process, MEDLINE Epub Ahead of Print, ClinicalTrials.gov, WHO ICTRP and handsearching of journals and conference proceedings (searched 28 January 2020). We searched the reference lists of relevant articles and contacted the authors of included studies.

Selection criteria

We included randomised and quasi‐randomised controlled trials which included a pessary for pelvic organ prolapse in at least one arm of the study.

Data collection and analysis

Two review authors independently assessed abstracts, extracted data, assessed risk of bias and carried out GRADE assessments with arbitration from a third review author if necessary.

Main results

We included four studies involving a total of 478 women with various stages of prolapse, all of which took place in high‐income countries. In one trial, only six of the 113 recruited women consented to random assignment to an intervention and no data are available for those six women. We could not perform any meta‐analysis because each of the trials addressed a different comparison. None of the trials reported data about perceived resolution of prolapse symptoms or about psychological outcome measures. All studies reported data about perceived improvement of prolapse symptoms.

Generally, the trials were at high risk of performance bias, due to lack of blinding, and low risk of selection bias. We downgraded the certainty of evidence for imprecision resulting from the low numbers of women participating in the trials.

Pessary versus no treatment: at 12 months' follow‐up, we are uncertain about the effect of pessaries compared with no treatment on perceived improvement of prolapse symptoms (mean difference (MD) in questionnaire scores ‐0.03, 95% confidence interval (CI) ‐0.61 to 0.55; 27 women; 1 study; very low‐certainty evidence), and cure or improvement of sexual problems (MD ‐0.29, 95% CI ‐1.67 to 1.09; 27 women; 1 study; very low‐certainty evidence). In this comparison we did not find any evidence relating to prolapse‐specific quality of life or to the number of women experiencing adverse events (abnormal vaginal bleeding or de novo voiding difficulty).

Pessary versus pelvic floor muscle training (PFMT): at 12 months' follow‐up, we are uncertain if there is a difference between pessaries and PFMT in terms of women's perceived improvement in prolapse symptoms (MD ‐9.60, 95% CI ‐22.53 to 3.33; 137 women; low‐certainty evidence), prolapse‐specific quality of life (MD ‐3.30, 95% CI ‐8.70 to 15.30; 1 study; 116 women; low‐certainty evidence), or cure or improvement of sexual problems (MD ‐2.30, 95% ‐5.20 to 0.60; 1 study; 48 women; low‐certainty evidence). Pessaries may result in a large increase in risk of adverse events compared with PFMT (RR 75.25, 95% CI 4.70 to 1205.45; 1 study; 97 women; low‐certainty evidence). Adverse events included increased vaginal discharge, and/or increased urinary incontinence and/or erosion or irritation of the vaginal walls.

Pessary plus PFMT versus PFMT alone: at 12 months' follow‐up, pessary plus PFMT probably leads to more women perceiving improvement in their prolapse symptoms compared with PFMT alone (RR 2.15, 95% CI 1.58 to 2.94; 1 study; 260 women; moderate‐certainty evidence). At 12 months' follow‐up, pessary plus PFMT probably improves women's prolapse‐specific quality of life compared with PFMT alone (median (interquartile range (IQR)) POPIQ score: pessary plus PFMT 0.3 (0 to 22.2); 132 women; PFMT only 8.9 (0 to 64.9); 128 women; P = 0.02; moderate‐certainty evidence). Pessary plus PFMT may slightly increase the risk of abnormal vaginal bleeding compared with PFMT alone (RR 2.18, 95% CI 0.69 to 6.91; 1 study; 260 women; low‐certainty evidence). The evidence is uncertain if pessary plus PFMT has any effect on the risk of de novo voiding difficulty compared with PFMT alone (RR 1.32, 95% CI 0.54 to 3.19; 1 study; 189 women; low‐certainty evidence).

Authors' conclusions

We are uncertain if pessaries improve pelvic organ prolapse symptoms for women compared with no treatment or PFMT but pessaries in addition to PFMT probably improve women's pelvic organ prolapse symptoms and prolapse‐specific quality of life. However, there may be an increased risk of adverse events with pessaries compared to PFMT. Future trials should recruit adequate numbers of women and measure clinically important outcomes such as prolapse specific quality of life and resolution of prolapse symptoms.  

The review found two relevant economic evaluations. Of these, one assessed the cost‐effectiveness of pessary treatment, expectant management and surgical procedures, and the other compared pessary treatment to PFMT.

Author(s)

Carol Bugge, Elisabeth J Adams, Deepa Gopinath, Fiona Stewart, Melanie Dembinsky, Pauline Sobiesuo, Rohna Kearney

Abstract

Plain language summary

Pessaries (mechanical devices) for managing pelvic organ prolapse in women

Review question

How effective are pessaries (mechanical devices) for managing pelvic organ prolapse in women?

Background

Pelvic organs, such as the uterus, bladder or bowel, may protrude into the vagina because of weakness in the tissues that normally support them. This protrusion is known as pelvic organ prolapse. Women who experience prolapse report a wide variety of symptoms that affect their quality of life. The choice of treatment options for pelvic organ prolapse symptoms is dictated largely by patient choice, as the interventions of lifestyle changes, pelvic floor muscle training (PFMT), pessary and surgery are very different with different complication risks. Vaginal pessaries are one treatment option for prolapse that are commonly used to restore the prolapsed organs to their normal position and hence relieve symptoms. A vaginal pessary can be used to treat all four prolapse stages.

How up‐to‐date is this review?

We searched for studies published up to 28 January 2020.

Study characteristics

We found four studies involving 478 women with various stages of prolapse. All four studies were carried out in high‐income countries.

Key results

None of the studies reported whether or not the women's prolapse symptoms were completely resolved. We are uncertain about the effect of pessaries compared with no treatment on perceived improvement of prolapse symptoms, and cure or improvement of sexual problems. We did not find any evidence relating to the risk of vaginal bleeding or difficulty urinating in the studies comparing pessaries with no treatment.

We are uncertain if pessaries have any effect on improving women's prolapse symptoms when pessary is compared with PFMT. The evidence is also very uncertain about the effect of pessaries compared with PFMT on prolapse‐specific quality of life and on sexual problems. Pessaries may result in a greater risk of adverse events, including vaginal discharge, increased urinary incontinence and erosion of the vaginal walls, compared with PFMT.

Pessary plus PFMT probably leads to more women perceiving improvement in their prolapse symptoms and in their prolapse‐specific quality of life compared with PFMT alone. Compared with PFMT alone, pessary plus PFMT may slightly increase the risk of abnormal vaginal bleeding and the risk of having difficulty urinating, for women who did not have this problem before starting prolapse treatment, but the evidence is very uncertain.

Certainty of the evidence

We assessed the evidence relating to pessary compared with no treatment as very low certainty because of the low numbers of women participating in the study and because of problems with the way the trial was conducted. We assessed the evidence relating to pessary compared with PFMT, and pessary plus PFMT compared with PFMT alone, as low‐ to moderate‐certainty because of the low numbers of women involved in the studies.

Authors' conclusions

Each of these trials contain small numbers of women, reducing the certainty of our conclusions. We are uncertain if pessaries improve pelvic organ prolapse symptoms for women compared with no treatment or when compared to another active treatment like PFMT, but pessaries in addition to PFMT probably improve women's symptoms and prolapse‐specific quality of life. However, there may be an increased risk of adverse events with pessaries compared to no treatment or PFMT.

The review found two economic evaluation studies that compared pessary treatment to alternative interventions (PFMT, expectant management and surgical procedures).

A visual summary of some of the results from this review can be found here.

Author(s)

Carol Bugge, Elisabeth J Adams, Deepa Gopinath, Fiona Stewart, Melanie Dembinsky, Pauline Sobiesuo, Rohna Kearney

Reviewer's Conclusions

Authors' conclusions 

Implications for practice 

The evidence from randomised controlled trials (RCTs) on which to base the treatment of women with pelvic organ prolapse using vaginal pessaries remains very limited. The research base is growing but more trials are needed in order for data to be pooled in a way that will allow for greater certainty in recommendations for treatment. Clinical staff may wish to read this review alongside the surgical Cochrane Reviews (Baessler 2018; Maher 2016a; Maher 2016b; Maher 2016c; Mowat 2018) and the Cochrane Review of conservative and lifestyle measures (Hagen 2011a).

In the postpartum period, one small trial compared pessary versus standard care (no treatment for six weeks), and across the available comparisons the certainty of evidence was very low, making recommendations for practice in the postpartum period difficult. Panman 2016 compared pessary versus pelvic floor muscle training (PFMT), and it was uncertain if pessary had an effect on women's perceived improvement in prolapse symptoms in comparison to PFMT. Both PFMT and pessary are active treatments and, as such, it is not known if improvements were greater than if no treatment had been given. Cheung 2016 added a pessary to PFMT and probably led to more women perceiving an improvement in prolapse symptoms. It may be that practitioners consider the added benefit of a pessary for women with prolapse who are receiving PFMT.

There was some evidence of an increase in adverse events with pessary use. However, the clinical significance of these adverse events is unknown but may be argued to be low. Specifically, increased vaginal bleeding and discharge may be adverse events a woman is willing to accept if she experiences a decrease in prolapse symptoms. De novo stress urinary incontinence (SUI) may be a more problematic adverse event for women, but the evidence surrounding the effects of pessary on de novo SUI are not certain. While some evidence is suggestive of an increase in adverse events for women who use a pessary for prolapse, the extent to which these events are bothersome for women requires further investigation before recommendations can be made for practice.

Implications for research 

Adequately‐powered trials measuring clinically‐important outcomes are urgently needed to guide international practice. The comparison between pessary and no active treatment is perhaps difficult as there is observational evidence suggesting benefit of pessary and other conservative treatments, making a no active treatment group possibly unacceptable to women or policy makers (Hagen 2011a; Lamers 2011).

Across the other comparisons more research is needed, specifically: pessary versus another active treatment; pessary as an adjunct to other treatments; and comparison between pessary types. It is important that future trials measure women's perceived resolution of prolapse symptoms. Qualitative research about the bothersomeness of adverse events of pessary use would also support the understanding of adverse event reporting in the trials. As the evidence base evolves, it will also be helpful to explore the effectiveness of pessary for different stages and types of prolapse.

This review identified only two relevant economic evaluations, which highlights both the lack of economic evidence and the need to conduct more economic evaluations on prolapse interventions that includes pessaries.

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