AI Article Synopsis

  • The study aimed to analyze if measuring stricture length before surgery impacts the procedure choice, intraoperative measurements, and postoperative outcomes.
  • Data was collected from the CORRUS database, comparing patients with and without preoperative stricture measurements to evaluate various outcomes, and found no significant differences in complications or recovery.
  • Although preoperative measurements were common, they did not provide substantial benefits for the surgical management of ureteral stricture disease, with only stricture length predicting some postoperative complications.

Article Abstract

Purpose: We sought to determine whether preoperative stricture length measurement affected the choice of procedure performed, its correlation to intraoperative stricture length, and postoperative outcomes.

Methods: The Collaborative of Reconstructive Robotic Ureteral Surgery (CORRUS) database was queried for patients undergoing robotic ureteral reconstructive surgery from 2013 to 2021 who had surgical stricture length measurement. From this cohort, we identified patients with and without preoperative stricture length measurement via retrograde pyelogram or antegrade nephrostogram. Outcomes evaluated included intraoperative complications, 30-day complications greater than Clavien-Dindo grade II, hardware-free status, and need for additional procedures.

Results: Of 153 patients with surgical stricture length measurements, 102 (66.7%) had preoperative radiographic measurement. No repair type was more likely to have preoperative measurement. The Pearson correlation coefficient between surgical and radiographic stricture length measurements was + 0.79. The average surgical measurement was 0.71 cm (± 1.52) longer than radiographic assessment. Those with preoperative imaging waited on average 5.0 months longer for surgery, but this finding was not statistically significant (p = 0.18). There was no statistically significant difference in intraoperative complications, 30-day complication rates, hardware-free status at last follow-up, or need for additional procedures between patients with and without preoperative measurement. The only significant predictive factor was preoperative stricture length on 30-day postoperative complications.

Conclusions: Despite relatively high prevalence of preoperative radiographic stricture length measurement, there are few measures where it offers clinically meaningful diagnostic information towards the definitive surgical management of ureteral stricture disease.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00345-023-04525-6DOI Listing

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