by
Gina Northington;
Robert Kelley;
M Alperin;
S Abramowitch;
M Alarab;
M Bortolini;
B Brown;
LA Burnett;
KA Connell;
M Damaser;
R de Vita;
CE Gargett;
MK Guess;
Z Guler;
RN Jorge;
M Kibschull;
K Miller;
PA Moalli;
IU Mysorekar;
MR Routzong;
O Shynlova;
CW Swenson;
MA Therriault
by
Marianna Alperin;
Steven Abramowitch;
May Alarab;
Maria Bortolini;
Bryan Brown;
Lindsey A Burnett;
Kathleen A Connell;
Margot S Damaser;
Raffaella de Vita;
Caroline E Gargett;
Marsha K Guess;
Zeliha Guler;
Renato Natal Jorge;
Robert Kelley;
Mark Kibschull;
Kristin Miller;
Pamela A Moalli;
Indira U Mysorekar;
Megan R Routzong;
Oksana Shynlova;
Carolyn W Swenson;
Marrisa A Therriault;
Gina Northington
Pelvic floor disorders (PFDs) are complex conditions that impact millions of women worldwide. It is estimated that PFDs will affect approximately 30%–50% of women older than 50 years and incur a 20% lifetime risk of undergoing at least 1 surgical procedure to repair either pelvic organ prolapse (POP) or stress urinary incontinence (SUI) by age 80 years.1 The surgical costs alone are estimated to exceed $10 billion annually,1–6 and this does not account for the cost of nonsurgical and conservative treatments. Although a large body of epidemiological literature provides important information regarding the risk factors for PFDs, the pathogenesis of POP and SUI continues to be poorly understood. Consequently, POP and SUI are associated with significant health care expenditure primarily due to lack of preventive measures, high failure rate of available interventions, and the need for retreatments. Furthermore, the long-standing gaps in mechanistic insights into the pathophysiology of POP and SUI represent one of the major barriers to the development of scientifically rational preventive and therapeutic strategies. Women’s health across the life span depends on a better understanding of the anatomy and physiology of the female pelvic floor (PF) and the causal links between the multifactorial epidemiological risk factors and POP/SUI.