Vaginal Arcocolposuspension versus Transobturator Midurethral Sling for Stress Urinary Incontinence: A Randomized Trial with Mid-Term Follow-Up

OZCELTİK G1, SAHIN C1, YASA C2, Gungor Ugurlucan F2, Acar A3, Yeniel A1

Research Type

Clinical

Abstract Category

Female Stress Urinary Incontinence (SUI)

Abstract 11
Female LUTS
Scientific Podium Short Oral Session 2
Wednesday 7th October 2026
09:45 - 09:52
Parallel Hall 3
Stress Urinary Incontinence Quality of Life (QoL) Clinical Trial Surgery
1. Faculty of Medicine, Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Ege University, Izmir, Turkey., 2. Division of Urogynecology, Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Istanbul University, Istanbul, Turkey., 3. Department of Physiotherapy and Rehabilitation, Faculty of Health Sciences, Izmir Katip Celebi University, Balatçık Mahallesi Havaalanı Şosesi No:33/2 Balatçık, 35620, İzmir, Turkey
Presenter
Links

Abstract

Hypothesis / aims of study
Midurethral slings are effective for stress urinary incontinence (SUI) but are associated with mesh-related complications and long-term decline in efficacy. Vaginal arcocolposuspension (VACS) is a mesh-free native tissue repair technique designed to restore urethral support via fixation to the arcus tendineus fascia pelvis. We hypothesized that VACS provides objective continence outcomes comparable to transobturator midurethral sling (TOT) while avoiding implant-related risks and potentially improving patient-reported outcomes.
Study design, materials and methods
This was a prospective randomized open-label parallel-group clinical trial including women with urodynamically confirmed pure SUI. Participants were randomized 1:1 to VACS or TOT. Co-primary outcomes were objective continence assessed by one-hour pad test and provoked cough stress test at 12 months. Secondary outcomes included validated questionnaires (UDI-6, IIQ-7, I-QOL, OAB-V8, FSFI) and adverse events. Extended follow-up was performed at approximately 43 months. Sample size was calculated to detect clinically meaningful differences in objective continence with 80% power and α=0.05, requiring 60 participants. Analyses included intention-to-treat principles and longitudinal comparisons.
Results
A total of 60 participants were randomized; 57 completed 12-month follow-up and 36 were available at mid-term follow-up (~43 months). Objective dryness rates were comparable between groups at 12 months (VACS 88.9% vs TOT 77.8%) and at extended follow-up (64.7% vs 61.1%), with no statistically significant differences. Both groups demonstrated a decline in continence over time consistent with known long-term patterns.

Patient-reported outcomes improved substantially in both groups. At extended follow-up, UDI-6 scores were significantly lower in the VACS group (4.5 vs 8.0), and I-QOL scores were significantly higher (94.3 vs 74.4), indicating lower symptom burden and better quality of life. Change-from-baseline analyses showed similar magnitudes of improvement between groups.

No mesh-related complications occurred in the VACS group. In contrast, two cases of delayed mesh extrusion were observed in the TOT group during extended follow-up. Sexual function remained stable and comparable between groups.
Interpretation of results
VACS achieves objective continence outcomes within the established efficacy range of midurethral sling procedures while avoiding synthetic material use. The absence of mesh-related complications and favorable patient-reported outcomes suggest a potential clinical advantage of native tissue repair. The comparable change scores indicate similar treatment effects, while absolute differences may reflect residual symptom burden differences over time.
Concluding message
Vaginal arcocolposuspension is a viable mesh-free alternative for the surgical treatment of SUI, providing comparable objective outcomes to TOT with improved patient-reported outcomes and no implant-related complications at mid-term follow-up. These findings support further evaluation of native tissue approaches in larger randomized trials.
References
  1. Ford AA et al. Mid-urethral sling operations for stress urinary incontinence in women. Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2015.
  2. Kenton K, Stoddard AM, Zyczynski H, Albo M, Rickey L, Norton P, Wai C, Kraus SR, Sirls LT, Kusek JW, Litman HJ, Chang RP, Richter HE. 5-year longitudinal followup after retropubic and transobturator mid urethral slings. J Urol. 2015 Jan;193(1):203-10. doi: 10.1016/j.juro.2014.08.089.
  3. Salo H, Sova H, Laru J, Talvensaari-Mattila A, Nyyssönen V, Santala M, Piltonen T, Koivurova S, Rossi HR. Long-term results of a prospective randomized trial comparing tension-free vaginal tape versus transobturator tape in stress urinary incontinence. Int Urogynecol J. 2023 Sep;34(9):2249-2256. doi: 10.1007/s00192-023-05527-z.
Disclosures
Funding This study was supported by the European Innovation Council (Grant Agreement No. 954909), awarded to Soranus Arge ve Danismanlik Hizmetleri A.S. for the development of the investigated device. Clinical Trial Yes Registration Number ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT06173180; NCT07483138 RCT Yes Subjects Human Ethics Committee Ege University Faculty of Medicine Clinical Research Ethics Committee; Istanbul University Istanbul Faculty of Medicine Clinical Research Ethics Committee Helsinki Yes Informed Consent Yes AI For simple textual assistance in writing the abstract manuscript
07/06/2026 04:01:42