Aim: The newborn with abnormal genital development presents a difficult diagnostic and treatment challenge for the pediatric surgeon providing care. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the results of surgical treatment for children with ambiguous genitalia.

Patients And Methods: The records of 85 children managed surgically for ambiguous genitalia in our unit from 1988 to 2005 were reviewed retrospectively. Age at surgery, operative procedures, sex of rearing, and outcome were recorded.

Results: The intersex committee's decision concerning sex assignment was female for 62 children (75%) and male for 23 children (25%). The etiologies of children reared as female were congenital adrenal hyperplasia (n = 37), male pseudohermaphroditism (n = 12), mixed gonadal dysgenesis (n = 6), true hermaphroditism (n = 4), and Mayer-Rokitansky syndrome (n = 3). Fifteen children with male pseudohermaphroditism, 5 children with congenital adrenal hyperplasia, and 3 children with true hermaphroditism were reared as male. The mean age at surgery was 4.4 years and follow-up period averaged 7 years. Eighteen (29%) patients with feminization procedures and 8 (34%) of 23 patients with masculinization procedures experienced complications and required redo operations. Vaginal stenosis was the most common complication.

Conclusion: The surgical management of ambiguous genitalia has always been difficult, and it must be performed by skilled pediatric surgeon. Genital surgery in infancy needs to be reassessed in the light of literature findings revealing poor outcome. In patients who underwent feminizing genitoplasty, vaginal reconstruction should be delayed until adolescence to achieve better cosmetic and functional results.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jpedsurg.2006.12.036DOI Listing

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