Impact of new decrees on pelvic implant surgery in France: Results of a national survey among urologists and gynecologists - 26/04/26
, Caroline Thuillier c
, Thibault Thubert d
, Sophie Hurel e
, Julia Klap f
, Caroline Brandon g
, Sandrine Campagne-Loiseau h
, Pierre-Olivier Bosset i
, Laurence Donon j
, Lucie Even k
, Marie Florin l, m
, Frederic Girard n
, Rebecca Haddad o
, François Hervé p
, Claire Richard q
, Adrien Vidart i
, Caroline Plassais i
, Jean-Nicolas Cornu r
, Benoit Peyronnet q 
Abstract |
Introduction |
Recent decrees conditioning the placement of pelvic implants on a minimum annual activity threshold per institution have raised concerns. A survey was conducted among French urologists and gynecologists to assess their practices and perceptions of these measures.
Methods |
An online questionnaire was distributed via three scientific societies (AFU, CNGOF, SCGP) in May 2025. It covered four themes: respondents' characteristics, experience in pelviperineology, impact of the new decrees, and opinions on surgical thresholds. The response collection period was 21 days, with a reminder after one week.
Results |
A total of 431 practitioners responded (60% urologists, 40% gynecologists; 64% male; 34% aged 41–50). The majority worked in private practices (52%) and were trained in pelviperineology (61%). Regarding activity, 67% and 66% exceeded the thresholds for incontinence and pelvic organ prolapse (POP), respectively, but 18% and 18% did not meet them. Most incontinence procedures involved mid-urethral slings; 51% of respondents used only TVT, and 29% only TOT. For POP, sacrocolpopexy was the sole procedure performed by 9% of gynecologists and 61% of urologists. Among the latter, 59% did not perform Richter sacrospinous ligament fixation (vs. 6% of gynecologists). The perceived impact of the decrees was significant: 53% of practitioners (including 67% of urologists) reported a desire to withdraw from the management of female incontinence, and 46% from POP (including 79% of urologists). If authorization were lost, 71% would stop implanting meshes and 60% would refer patients elsewhere. Only 32% believed the thresholds would improve patient care. For 61% of practitioners, they did not guarantee individual experience, and for 51%, they did not reflect quality of care. Most respondents considered a threshold of 10 annual procedures more appropriate for POP and incontinence, and 78% believed that validation of specialized training would be more relevant than activity thresholds (78% among urologists).
Discussion |
This survey highlights a real risk of practitioner disengagement, particularly among urologists, potentially detrimental to healthcare provision. Thresholds are perceived as inadequate, and recognition of individual competence appears preferable.
Level of evidence |
4
Le texte complet de cet article est disponible en PDF.Keywords : Female urinary incontinence, Pelvic organ prolapse, Health care reform, Surgical site restriction, Surveys and Questionnaires
Plan
Vol 36 - N° 4
Article 103073- avril 2026 Retour au numéroBienvenue sur EM-consulte, la référence des professionnels de santé.
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