Large Study Reports That 65% of Male Patients with Stress Urinary Incontinence Were Dry at Two Years



    A condition that affects over two million men, stress urinary
    incontinence (SUI) is often a disturbing complication that follows the
    surgical removal of the prostate. Until now, there have been few
    options for treatment of this embarrassing condition.

    A large sample study reports that the ProACT(TM) (Adjustable
    Continence Therapy) has demonstrated to be a safe, effective and
    durable treatment for male stress urinary incontinence. The long-term
    study, titled International multi-center evaluation of the ProACT for
    male post prostatectomy stress urinary incontinence by Gilling, P. et
    al., reports that 65% of patients were dry (less than 1 pad a day) at
    two years. In addition, patients reported a significant improvement in
    quality of life (from 41.6 before the procedure to 74.6 at two years
    after the procedure, on a scale from 0-100).

    First used in 2000 in Austria by Dr. Wilhelm Hubner (one of the
    co-investigators in this study), the ProACT device was implanted in
    329 male patients in four international centers between 2001 and 2005.
    These patients suffered from incontinence arising from multiple
    etiologies (but predominantly post radical prostatectomy
    incontinence). "The promising results reported here suggest that this
    may be an appropriate, effective and durable first-line treatment to
    offer men with stress urinary incontinence after prostatectomy", said
    Dr. Wilhelm Hubner, Director of the Urology Department at the Humanis
    Clinic in Korneuburg. Study findings will be presented at the European
    Association of Urology (EAU) Annual Meeting (March 26-29) in Milan,
    Italy. For information on this and other studies, go to
    www.uromedica-inc.com.

    ProACT(TM) therapy and ACT(R) (Adjustable Continence Therapy) were
    developed by Uromedica and approved in Europe in 2002. Based on
    patented technology, the balloon volume can be percutaneously
    increased or decreased to meet the needs of the individual patient.
    The ProACT is the first-line treatment for post-prostatectomy urinary
    incontinence in men, and the ACT device treats stress urinary
    incontinence in women who have not responded to other interventions.

    About Uromedica

    Uromedica, Inc. was formed in 1997 to develop minimally invasive
    medical devices that treat unmet medical needs in the area of
    urogenital and related disorders. Fourteen million people suffer from
    stress urinary incontinence, an embarrassing condition that produces a
    significant cost to society and a disturbing trend as the population
    increases. The use of ACT and ProACT is growing significantly, and to
    date, around 6000 patients have been implanted with this minimally
    invasive device which can be non-invasively adjusted until the patient
    reaches the desired level of continence. The company is in the final
    stages of clinical studies needed to obtain FDA approval, with
    submission expected in Fall 2008.

    ProACT(TM) and ACT(R) are not available in the United States and
    are available in selected markets outside the United States.