Regenerated Cell Therapy for Stress Urinary Incontinence: A Meta-Analysis.

Journal of Investigative Surgery : the Official Journal of the Academy of Surgical Research
Ziye HuangJiongming Li

Abstract

To evaluate the efficacy and safety of regenerated cell therapy for stress urinary incontinence (UI) in humans. We searched articles from PubMed, Embase, and the Cochrane Library database published before February 24, 2020. Of 396 records identified, 23 articles on human clinical research met our criteria, including a total of 890 patients. Stata/SE12.0 software was used to analyze cure, efficiency (cure rate plus improvement rate), and complication rates. No significant differences in cure rates and effective rates were observed for any cell type in males. However, in females, the myocytes with fibroblasts subgroup (82%) and nucleated cells with platelets subgroup (89%) exhibited significantly higher cure rates compared with the other two subgroups (25% and 36%). Pooled effective rates of myocytes and fibroblasts (92%) and nucleated cells with platelets (97%) were also higher compared with the other two subgroups (72% and 60%). Pooled complication rates were 23% and 26% in males and females, respectively, and there were some differences among subgroups. Although some studies reported postoperative complications, no serious complications were reported and most recovered within 1-2 weeks. Limited studies have indicated the safet...Continue Reading

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