Transvaginal single-port laparoscopic-assisted vaginal sacral fixation
Introduction
Pelvic organ prolapse (POP) refers to the pelvic organs and adjacent vaginal wall protruding into the vagina or prolapsing out of the vagina. This is a common disease in elderly women. With the aging of the population, POP is becoming an increasingly common condition, particularly in older females. The risk factors of POP are various, and lead to the weakening of the supporting pelvic floor connective tissue, muscle tissue, and nerve injury. The patients may have no symptoms or severe symptoms, such as urinary tract-related symptoms, pelvic pain, incontinence, back pain, and dyspareunia. Nonsurgical treatment for POP includes pelvic floor muscle exercise and vaginal insertion of a uterine bracket. According to the patient's expected purpose, degree of activity, and health status, the surgical treatment should be individualized, and multiple defects should be repaired. Thus far, vaginal sacral fixation has been considered a good option in the surgical treatment of this disease (Figure 1). In accordance with the concept of minimally invasive surgery, we have tried to integrate single-port laparoscopic technology into the treatment of POP. We here report a case from Yantai Yuhuangding Hospital, China. We present the following case in accordance with the CARE reporting checklist (available at https://gpm.amegroups.org/article/view/10.21037/gpm-20-69/rc).
Patient information
The patient was a 66-year-old woman, complaining of a vulva prolapse lump for 1 year that was aggravated for 1 month. Her life quality was severely reduced by this disease, and she had a strong desire for operation. Pelvic examination revealed no obvious bulge in the anterior or posterior walls of the vagina. The surface of the cervix was smooth. The external cervical orifice was to be outside the vaginal orifice, but the uterine body was found located within the vagina and of normal size. No obvious abnormality was found in bilateral appendages. The POP-Q examination result are shown in Table 1.
Table 1
Variable | Results |
---|---|
Aa | −3 |
Ap | −3 |
TVL | 6 |
Ba | 0 |
Bp | 0 |
Gh | 3 |
C | 2.5 |
D | 0 |
Pb | 3 |
POP, pelvic organ prolapse; TVL, total vagina length; Gh, genital hiatus; Pb, perineal body.
All procedures performed in studies involving human participants were in accordance with the Helsinki Declaration (as revised in 2013). Written informed consent was obtained from the patient for publication of this study and any accompanying images.
Diagnostic assessment
Her POP-Q examination results were the following: uterine prolapse, POP-Q III; anterior vaginal wall prolapse, POP-Q II; posterior vaginal wall prolapse, POP-Q II.
Given the results of the relevant examination, contraindications to operation could be excluded. After informed consent was signed by the patient, we performed the single-port laparoscopic-assisted transvaginal sacral fixation.
Video 1: Transvaginal hysterectomy was performed first. We then prepared the port for single-port laparoscopy with an incision protector and sterile gloves. An artificial pneumoperitoneum was established and the laparoscope was placed inside the pelvic cavity through the port.
Therapeutic intervention
Surgical operation using transvaginal single-port laparoscopy (Figures 2 and 3)
- The rectum was separated and the sacrum was exposed. From 1.5–2 cm above the vaginal stump to the sacral promontory, the posterior peritoneum was incised longitudinally along the right side of the rectum using an ultrasonic scalpel. The rectum was pushed to the left to expose the sacrum and determine the position of sacrum 2.
- The anterior longitudinal ligament in front of sacrum 2 was separated, exposed, and sutured. The loose tissue ahead of sacrum 2 was removed and the anterior longitudinal ligament was exposed; 2-0 non absorbable sliding line was used to suture the upper right and lower left of the ligament.
- The retroperitoneum at the right of the rectum was sutured closed. Two nonabsorbable sliding lines were embedded outside the peritoneum, and care was taken to keep the sliding line sliding without resistance. The details of our suture method are shown in Figures 4-6
. Figure 4 The anterior longitudinal ligament of sacrum is sutured twice with 2-0 nonabsorbable sliding suture.Figure 5 The peritoneum at the left of the rectum and the suture at the other end of the suture are sutured to the edge of the extraperitoneal incision using suture 1. The 2 ends of the other suture are sewn into it, with both ends of the needle being able to slide. The tail of the thread is knotted and marked, with the tail of the thread of the needle being able to slide. The 4 ends of the 2 sutures are reserved, with at least 1-end of each suture being able to slide.
Removal of the laparoscope and suturing the top of vagina transvaginally
- The peritoneum was sutured circularly with absorbable suture. The front edge was close to the edge while the posterior edge was about 1 cm left of the edge.
- The sliding line was sutured to the anterior longitudinal ligament on the stumps of the main and sacral ligaments of the same side of the vaginal wall. Care was taken to not penetrate the vaginal mucosa, and the thread was left outside.
- An absorbable suture was used to close the vaginal wall intermittently or continuously.
Transvaginal suspension of the top of the vagina
Finally, the sliding line was tied to the location of the sacral promontory, ending 1
After operation (Figure 7), transvaginal examination showed that there was no prolapse of the anterior and posterior wall of the vagina and the top of the vagina (C point: –6 cm). After operation, the intestinal function of the patient recovered quickly with no serious complaints (Table 2).
Table 2
Variable | Results |
---|---|
Aa | −3 |
Ap | −3 |
TVL | 6 |
Ba | −3 |
Bp | −3 |
Gh | 3 |
C | 6 |
D | – |
Pb | 3 |
POP, pelvic organ prolapse; TVL, total vagina length; Gh, genital hiatus; Pb, perineal body.
Discussion
With continued economic development of and an aging population, the incidence rate of POP is increasing year by year. At present, surgery is the main treatment method for POP with a grade III–IV POP-Q. Vaginal sacral fixation has the advantages of a low complication rate, high anatomic cure rate, and little impact on sexual function. It has become one of the standard operation methods for treating pelvic defects (1-3), and nearly 50% of anterior vaginal wall and 30% of posterior vaginal wall prolapse can be corrected using this approach after correction of middle pelvic defects (4).
With the continuous development of minimally invasive surgical equipment and instruments, the surgical approach is evolving from traditional porous laparoscopic surgery to transumbilical single-port laparoscopic surgery and even natural lumen endoscopic surgery (NOTES). NOTES is a kind of endoscopic surgery that uses the natural lumen of the human body, such as oral cavity, anus, urethra, vagina, and so on, and penetrates the tube wall to reach the chest, abdomen, and pelvic cavity to establish the operation channel and pneumoperitoneum to diagnose and treat diseases (5). This concept is part of the pursuit in the surgery sciences to develop from invasive to minimally invasive and finally to non-invasive operation. In accordance with the aims of ensuring the safety of operation, completely removing tumor and lesion tissue, and retaining organ function, it is a surgical method that reduces the pain of patients, leaves no scars on the surface of the body, prompts no bodily reactions, and incurs no additional medical expenses. This is the ideal which every surgeon pursues.
In 2012, Noblett (6) carried out a feasibility study of transvaginal NOTES sacral vaginoplasty on cadavers. It was also confirmed by our group that transvaginal vaginal sacral fixation is effective in the treatment of pelvic prolapse disease. Having experience using vaginal single-hole laparoscopic-assisted surgery, we find the field of view is more open, and that there is reduced bleeding, trauma, and postoperative recovery times, among other advantages. It is in line with the concept of minimally invasive surgery that the prolapsed dome can be anatomically reduced by using the natural passage of human body, while the vaginal axial direction does not change. With this method, the perioperative disease rate is low, as long as the applied anatomy of presacral area is mastered, serious complications such as intraoperative massive hemorrhage can be avoided. The specific complications caused by patch use can be avoided by using a nonabsorbable sliding line instead of a patch. However, it should be noted that compared with the traditional laparoscopy method, single-port laparoscopic surgery has more prominent characteristics of minimally invasive and aesthetic appearance, but due to its “chopsticks” effect, it is relatively difficult to suture and knot under single-port laparoscopy, as this requires higher surgical skills and patience. Therefore, the operation seems simple, but the actual operation requires surgeons to have mastery of single-port laparoscopy techniques and rich experience in pelvic floor and vaginal surgery. Moreover, the surgeon should be proficient in anterior sacral fixation. During the operation, the suture of the anterior longitudinal ligament should not be too deep or too shallow to ensure the exact and effective surgical suspension, and thus laparoscopic or open anterior sacral fixation operation experience is necessary. The transvaginal single-hole laparoscopy has also changed our consistent top-down operation habit. The operation field of vision needs the adjustment of the operator to adapt to the new operation vision and habits. At present, the application of NOTES technology in female pelvic floor disorder surgery is only limited to case reports, and its potential technical advantages still need to be verified by more clinical studies (7). However, as long as the above basic operation techniques are mastered, it is believed that transvaginal single-port laparoscopic-assisted vaginal sacral fixation has high clinical value and is should be promoted for clinical application.
Acknowledgments
The video was awarded the second prize in the Second International Elite Gynecologic Surgery Competition (2020 Masters of Gynecologic Surgery).
Funding: None.
Footnote
Provenance and Peer Review: This article was commissioned by the editorial office, Gynecology and Pelvic Medicine for the series “Award-Winning Videos from the Second International Elite Gynecologic Surgery Competition (2020 Masters of Gynecologic Surgery)”. The article has undergone external peer review.
Reporting Checklist: The authors have completed the CARE reporting checklist. Available at https://gpm.amegroups.org/article/view/10.21037/gpm-20-69/rc
Conflicts of Interest: All authors have completed the ICMJE uniform disclosure form (available at https://gpm.amegroups.org/article/view/10.21037/gpm-20-69/coif). The series “Award-Winning Videos from the Second International Elite Gynecologic Surgery Competition (2020 Masters of Gynecologic Surgery)” was commissioned by the editorial office without any funding or sponsorship. The authors have no other conflicts of interest to declare.
Ethical Statement: The authors are accountable for all aspects of the work in ensuring that questions related to the accuracy or integrity of any part of the work are appropriately investigated and resolved. All procedures performed in studies involving human participants were in accordance with the Helsinki Declaration (as revised in 2013). Written informed consent was obtained from the patient for publication of this study and any accompanying images.
Open Access Statement: This is an Open Access article distributed in accordance with the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 4.0 International License (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0), which permits the non-commercial replication and distribution of the article with the strict proviso that no changes or edits are made and the original work is properly cited (including links to both the formal publication through the relevant DOI and the license). See: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/.
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(English Language Editor: J. Gray)
Cite this article as: Qu L, Liu C, Mu N, Li Y. Transvaginal single-port laparoscopic-assisted vaginal sacral fixation. Gynecol Pelvic Med 2021;4:26.