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Regenerative treatment for male stress urinary incontinence by periurethral injection of adipose‐derived regenerative cells: Outcome of the ADRESU study

Momokazu Gotoh, Shinobu Shimizu, Tokunori Yamamoto, Osamu Ishizuka, Tomonori Yamanishi, Atsushi Mizokami, Kazutaka Narimoto, Kazuhiro Toriyama, Yuzuru Kamei, Shinobu Nakayama, Yachiyo Kuwatsuka, Masaaki Mizuno, Akihiro Hirakawa

2020International Journal of Urology18 citationsDOI

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: To report the outcome of the ADRESU study, a multicenter, single-arm, investigator-initiated clinical trial to confirm the efficacy and safety of regenerative treatment for male patients with stress urinary incontinence. METHODS: The participants were male patients with mild-to-moderate stress urinary incontinence persisting for >1 year after prostatectomy. Autologous adipose-derived regenerative cells were isolated using the Celution system from adipose tissue obtained by liposuction. Adipose-derived regenerative cells and mixture of adipose-derived regenerative cells with adipose tissue were transurethrally injected into the rhabdosphincter and submucosal space of the urethra, respectively. The primary end-point was the proportion of patients with improvement of the urine leakage volume at 52 weeks (or last visit within 52 weeks). Improvement of leakage volume was defined as a decrease from baseline >50% by the 24-h pad test. A total of 10 secondary end-points were set. RESULTS: A total of 45 patients satisfying the eligibility criteria were enrolled. The primary end-point was met; the proportion of patients with improvement in leakage volume at 52 weeks was 37.2% (95% confidence interval 23.0-53.3%). No serious adverse events with causal relationships to the adipose-derived regenerative cells were encountered. There was a progressive improvement in secondary end-points. In the King's Health Questionnaire, improvement of quality of life scores showed greater improvement in responders, as compared with non-responders. CONCLUSIONS: Findings from the ADRESU study suggest the efficacy and safety of regenerative treatment for male patients with mild-to-moderate stress urinary incontinence.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineAdipose tissueUrologyUrinary incontinenceLiposuctionClinical endpointConfidence intervalAdverse effectRegenerative medicineUrethraInternal medicineClinical trialSurgeryStem cellGeneticsBiologyTissue Engineering and Regenerative MedicinePelvic floor disorders treatmentsUrinary Bladder and Prostate Research
Regenerative treatment for male stress urinary incontinence by periurethral injection of adipose‐derived regenerative cells: Outcome of the ADRESU study | Litcius