Anorectal physiology & pelvic floor disorder
- The Italian Unitary Society of Colon-Proctology (SIUCP: Società Italiana Unitaria di Colonproctologia) guidelines for the management of obstructed and ineffective defecation syndrome
-
Adolfo Renzi, Luigi Brusciano, Pasquale Talento, Luigi Marano, Francesca Iacobellis, Antonio Vallo, Giovanna Frezza, Maurizio Grillo, Alessio Palumbo, Elisa Palladino, Benedetto Neola, Fabrizio Foroni, Michele Lanza, Massimo Antropoli, Carmine Antropoli, Mauro Natale Maglio, Maria Laura Sandoval Sotelo, Gianluca Pagano, Maria Michela Di Nuzzo, Luciano Vicenzo, Michele Schiano di Visconte, Gabriele Naldini, Leonardo Lenisa, Marcello Gasparrini, Giuseppe Candilio, Massimo Pezzatini, Francesca Ascari, Alberto Di Leo, Monica Urbani, Simona Ascanelli, Alessandro Bussotti, Natale Calomino, Domenico Izzo, Roberto Peltrini, Michele D'Ambra, Giovanni Greco, Giuseppe D'Oriano, Alfredo Giordano, Claudio Gambardella, Diletta Paola Iovino, Andrea Grego, Luigi Pellecchia, Luigi Monaco, Ilaria Ferrante, Giovanni Luca Lamanna, Vinicio Mosca, Sergii Girnyi, Gianluca Minieri, Luigi Losacco, Giacomo Sarzo, Giuseppe Calabrò, Francesco Ghiglione, Sergio Agradi, Michele Pinto, Andrea Marazzi, Mariangela Desantis, Federico Maria Mongardini, Massimo Mongardini, Aurora Marotta, Andrea Lauretta, Giovanni Ferreri, Alfredo Annicchiarico, Francesca Da Pozzo, Alfredo Ansalone, Matteo Zuin, Nadine Osman, Paolino Mauro, Corrado Rispoli, Tomasz Cwalinski, Roberto Rizzato, Nando Gallese, Marta Mozzon, Alessandro Stazi, Luana Franceschilli, Angelo Stuto, Eugenio Cudazzo, Silvia Malerba, Riccardo Brachet Contul, Antonio Canero, Nicola Antonacci, Francesca Milazzo, Costantino Magnani, Cristina Folliero, Francesca Babic, Silvia Marola, Andrea Braini, Guido Benegiamo, Umberto Cocozza, Bruno Masci, Rita Laforgia, Angela Pezzolla, Antonio Colangelo, Carmelo Geremia, Raffaella Marina Di Renzo, Claudio Pagano, Roberto Picheo, Umberto Favetta, Fabrizio Gambarini, Laura Chimisso, Gianmattia Terracciano, Adelaide Andriani, Giovanni Marino, Patrizia Liguori, Carmen Formisano, Izabela Zofia Paszkiewicz, Alfonso Reginelli, Francesco Tumminelli, Martina Caruso, Marianna Pennacchio, Francesco Antonio Ciarleglio, Nicola Lizza, Francesco d’Aniello, Lorenzo Asciore, Pierluigi Bianchi, Emanuela Tessari, Eleonora Rossin, Maria Paola Menna, Giampiero Ucchino, Fabrizio Vittadello, Monica Oliva, Francesca Gatto, Raffaella Ferrando, Ilaria Granese, Mario Cicconi, Massimiliano Mistrangelo, Giovanna Ioia, Valeria Gianfreda, Ettore Greco, Adriana Maria Landolfi, Giandomenico Di Sarno, Vincenzo Landolfi, Carolina Bartolini, Luciano Onofrio, Domenico De Vito, Salvatore Napolitano, Vincenzo Bottino, Antonio Longo, Antonio Brescia, Chiara Casiraghi, Alfonso Alderisio, Mario Massimo Mensorio, Ludovico Docimo, Antonio Brillantino
-
Ann Coloproctol. 2026;42(2):151-178. Published online April 28, 2026
-
DOI: https://doi.org/10.3393/ac.2025.00899.0128
-
-
Abstract
PDF
- The aim of these evidence-based guidelines is to present a consensus position from members of the Italian Unitary Society of Colon-Proctology (SIUCP: Società Italiana Unitaria di Colonproctologia) on the diagnosis and management of obstructed defecation syndrome (ODS), with the purpose of guiding physicians in the selection of the most appropriate treatment option. A panel of experts was appointed by the Board of the SIUCP to develop key questions addressing the main topics related to the management of ODS and to perform an accurate literature search for each topic, in order to provide evidence-based answers and to summarize them in structured statements. All clinical questions were discussed by the expert panel over multiple rounds using the Delphi approach, and consensus among the experts was achieved for each statement. The questions were formulated according to PICO (patients, intervention, comparison, outcome) criteria, and the statements were developed using the GRADE (Grading of Recommendations, Assessment, Development, and Evaluations) methodology. In patients with ODS refractory to first-line medical therapy, rehabilitation may be considered as a therapeutic option, particularly in cases of dyssynergic defecation, whereas a surgical approach may be indicated in patients with a high symptom score and an Oxford prolapse grade system score ≥3 on defecography (using magnetic resonance imaging or another modality). Surgical options include stapled transanal rectal resection and ventral mesh rectopexy, eventually combined, respectively, with pelvic organ prolapse suspension and sacrocolpopexy in the presence of multicompartment pelvic prolapse. A transverse perineal support procedure may be considered in the presence of excessive perineal descent. In patients with recurrent symptoms after surgery, transanal irrigation may represent a useful therapeutic option.
Anorectal physiology & pelvic floor disorder
- Transverse perineal support improves long-term outcomes in patients undergoing stapled transanal rectal resection for obstructed defecation syndrome: a multicenter observational case-control study
-
Adolfo Renzi, Luigi Marano, Pasquale Talento, Luigi Brusciano, Angela Pezzolla, Domenico Izzo, Carmine Antropoli, Francesco D’Aniello, Giandomenico Di Sarno, Gianluca Minieri, Grazia Cantore, Gianmattia Terracciano, Domenico Barbato, Ludovico Docimo, Massimo Antropoli, Alessio Palumbo, Michele Lanza, Emanuele Mario Caputi, Antonio Brillantino
-
Ann Coloproctol. 2025;41(4):330-337. Published online August 25, 2025
-
DOI: https://doi.org/10.3393/ac.2025.00073.0010
-
-
2,690
View
-
63
Download
-
2
Web of Science
-
3
Citations
-
Abstract
PDF
- Purpose
To evaluate the safety and long-term efficacy of stapled transanal rectal resection (STARR) combined with the transverse perineal support (TPS) procedure in the surgical treatment of obstructed defecation syndrome (ODS) associated with internal rectal prolapse and excessive perineal descent (PD).
Methods
This multicenter observational case-control study involved 7 European centers. During the initial study period, patients underwent STARR alone (group 1), while in the subsequent period, patients received STARR combined with TPS (group 2). All patients were followed clinically at 6, 12, 36, and 60 months, and were offered radiological evaluation between 3 and 5 years postoperatively.
Results
The median postoperative ODS score was similar between groups at 6 months (6 [range, 2–15] vs. 5 [range, 2–13]; P=0.16, Mann-Whitney U-test), but at 36 months, it was significantly lower in group 2 compared to group 1 (11 [range, 5–16] vs. 5 [range, 2–15]; P<0.001, Mann-Whitney U-test), with stable results maintained through 5 years. The success rate followed a similar trend. Postoperative maximum PD during straining remained unchanged in group 1, whereas it significantly decreased compared to preoperative values in group 2.
Conclusion
The addition of TPS to STARR in the surgical treatment of ODS associated with internal rectal prolapse and excessive PD appears to significantly improve long-term success rates and correct descending perineum.
-
Citations
Citations to this article as recorded by

- Laparoscopic Resection Rectopexy with Transanal Specimen Extraction for Complete Rectal Prolapse: Retrospective Cohort Study of Functional Outcomes
Mustafa Ates, Sami Akbulut, Emrah Sahin, Kemal Baris Sarici, Ertugrul Karabulut, Mukadder Sanli
Journal of Clinical Medicine.2026; 15(2): 718. CrossRef - Beyond stapled transanal rectal resection vs ventral rectopexy dichotomy: Toward a phenotype-guided surgical paradigm for obstructed defecation syndrome
Michele Schiano di Visconte, Sonia Sarnari
World Journal of Gastrointestinal Surgery.2026;[Epub] CrossRef - The Italian Unitary Society of Colon-Proctology (SIUCP: Società Italiana Unitaria di Colonproctologia) guidelines for the management of obstructed and ineffective defecation syndrome
Adolfo Renzi, Luigi Brusciano, Pasquale Talento, Luigi Marano, Francesca Iacobellis, Antonio Vallo, Giovanna Frezza, Maurizio Grillo, Alessio Palumbo, Elisa Palladino, Benedetto Neola, Fabrizio Foroni, Michele Lanza, Massimo Antropoli, Carmine Antropoli,
Annals of Coloproctology.2026; 42(2): 151. CrossRef