AI Article Synopsis

  • The study assessed the effectiveness and safety of non-papillary prone percutaneous nephrolithotomy (PCNL) for patients with various renal abnormalities, focusing on those with stones larger than 1.5 cm.
  • A total of 57 patients with different kidney conditions, such as horseshoe and malrotated kidneys, were treated, showing an 84.2% stone-free rate and an average hospital stay of about 2.7 days.
  • Results suggest that non-papillary punctures are a safe alternative to the traditional approach, challenging the belief that only papillary punctures are safe for treating large stones in malformed kidneys.

Article Abstract

Purpose: To evaluate the effectiveness and safety of non-papillary prone PCNL for the treatment of patients with renal abnormalities.

Methods: An observational retrospective cohort study including PCNL cases of patients with renal abnormalities was performed. The following inclusion criteria were applied: renal stones > 1.5 cm with maximal diameter, anatomical malformations of affected kidney (malrotated kidneys, horseshoe kidneys and kidneys with complete duplicated systems, medullary sponge kidney), patients treated with standard (30Fr) PCNL or mini-PCNL (22Fr). The lithotripsy was performed using the Lithoclast Master or the Lithoclast Trilogy (EMS Medical, Nyon, Switzerland).

Results: Overall, 57 patients, 35 males, and 22 females with any renal malformation underwent non-papillary prone PCNL. Our study included 25 patients with horseshoe kidneys, 21 with malrotated kidneys, 9 with kidneys with duplicated pelvicalyceal systems and 2 with medullary sponge kidneys. The mean cumulative stone size was 36 ± 1.4 mm and most of the stones were in the lower calyceal group (36.9%) and in the pelvis (27.2%). The stone-free rate (SFR) was 84.2% and the mean hospitalization time was 2.7 ± 0.7 days. In total, postoperative complications were developed in six patients (10.5%), half of them presenting fever and the other half requiring blood transfusion (Grade II).

Conclusion: The PCNL is the method of choice for treating large stones in anomalous kidneys. The generally accepted panacea that only a papillary puncture is safe is questioned by our results. Based on our experience, a non-papillary puncture proved to be a safe and effective procedure.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00345-022-04254-2DOI Listing

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