PREPARE: Perioperative REhabilitation Around Vaginal Prolapse RepAir Surgery for Recovery Enhancement
Part of paid clinical trials in Albuquerque, New Mexico.
- Sponsor
- University of New Mexico
- Study ID
- NCT07265973
- Status
- Recruiting
Conditions
- Postoperative Physical Functioning
Eligibility Criteria
- Sex
- FEMALE
- Age
- 18 Years - N/A
- Healthy Volunteers
- Accepted
Interventions
- Pelvic floor Home Exercise Program, this intervention is comprised of specific exercises that are easy to complete at home — OTHERMany exercise regimens focus on strengthening your pelvic floor. The intervention for this study is a novel pelvic floor physical therapy program that focuses on relaxing, stretching, and protecting the pelvic floor.
Study Details
Pelvic organ prolapse is a common problem faced by millions of patients in the United States, leading to an estimated 200,000 surgeries per year. The majority of patients in the US undergoing vaginal suspension between the ages of 60-79. Deconditioning and decreased functional status after surgery can be more pronounced in elderly populations. It is important to explore ways to improve postoperative functioning for this vulnerable population. This research study is about how good your physical functioning is after surgery. The physical functioning we are studying consist of normal daily activities, such as walking up and down stairs. This study is for patients with pelvic organ prolapse who are getting vaginal surgery to correct the prolapse. By doing this study, we hope to learn more about ways to improve physical functioning after vaginal prolapse repair surgery. Patients will be chosen at random to participate in or not to participate in a home daily exercise program for 6 weeks. We have participants who do not participate in the home exercise program so that we can compare their physical functioning to the participants who do exercise at home. By doing this comparison, we can find out if the home exercise program helps postoperative physical functioning. If you are in the home exercise group, a possible benefit is to have better physical functioning after surgery. If you are not assigned to the exercise group, the benefit is being a part of a study that could potentially help other women and yourself in the future to have better physical functioning after surgery. Patients will be enrolled in teh study only if they are undergoing specific surgeries at the University of New Mexico to correct their pelvic organ prolapse.
Key Dates
- Start date
- Nov 24, 2025
- Status verified
- Nov 2025
- Primary completion
- Jun 25, 2027
- Completion
- Jun 25, 2028
Study Design
- Enrollment
- 92 participants (estimated)
- Allocation
- RANDOMIZED
- Intervention model
- PARALLEL
- Primary purpose
- OTHER
Arms
- No Intervention: Routine Perioperative CareThis arm consists of control subjects who are not assigned to an intervention
- Experimental: Home Exercise ProgramThis arm consists of subjects who are assigned to perform the home exercise intervention
Primary Outcome Measure
Postoperative physical functioning [ Time Frame: Physical functioning will be assessed at baseline when patint is enrolled. Physical functioning will also be assessed postoperatively at 1, 2, and 6 weeks after surgery. ]
Central Contacts
- Rachel E Moore, MD720-394-9986
- Karen Clinical Reseach Manager505-272-7541
Locations (1)
| Facility | City | State | ZIP | Site coordinators |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| University of New Mexico Hospital | Albuquerque | New Mexico | 87106 | - |