Purpose: We report the 90-day morbidity of the ileal neobladder in a large, contemporary, homogenous series of patients who underwent radical cystectomy at a tertiary academic referral center using a standard approach.
Materials And Methods: Between January 1986 and September 2008 we performed 1,540 radical cystectomies. A total of 281 patients had an absolute contraindication for orthotopic reconstruction. The remaining 1,259 patients were candidates for a neobladder. Of these patients 1,013 (66%) finally received a neobladder and form the basis of this report. All patients had a thorough followup until December 2008 or until death. All complications within 90 days of surgery were defined, categorized and classified by an established 5 grade and 11 domain modification of the original Clavien system.
Results: Of 1,013 patients 587 (58%) experienced at least 1 complication within 90 days of surgery. Infectious complications were most common (24%) followed by genitourinary (17%), gastrointestinal (15%) and wound related complications (9%). The 90-day mortality rate was 2.3%. Of the patients 36% had minor (grade 1 to 2) and 22% had major (grade 3 to 5) complications. On univariate analysis the incidence and severity of the 90-day complications rate correlate highly significantly with age, tumor stage, American Society of Anesthesiologists score and preoperative comorbidity.
Conclusions: Radical cystectomy and ileal neobladder formation represent a major surgery with potential relevant early complications even in the most experienced hands. The rate of severe and lethal complications is acceptably low.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.juro.2010.05.037 | DOI Listing |
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