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Introduction: Since the Management of Myelomeningocele Study (MOMS) publication in 2011 we have designed a prospective protocol for surveillance of neurogenic bladder according to the Leal da Cruz categorization system (J Urol, 2015) that guides us on treatment. Our institution was the precursor of in-utero myelomeningocele (MMC) in Latin America, so our database was biased mostly for patients that underwent fetal surgery for MMC closure. We have demonstrated that in-utero MMC closure does not improve bladder function in opposition to the data from the urological branch of the MOMS study (10), but our control group was based on a historical cohort, before the onset of in-utero MMC repair in our division (15) Since 2018, we have identified an increasing number of referrals of postnatal operated MMC patients to our group just for urological follow up. We decided then to start this prospective protocol for all neurogenic patients and provide a contemporary database to record differences in early bladder function, presence of hydronephrosis and vesicoureteral reflux, treatment, initial outcome and indication of surgery among three mains groups (in-utero MMC repair, post-natal repair and miscellaneous other cases of neurogenic bladder). We want to present preliminary data of this cohort in the period of time 2018 to 2023 (5 years). There was not an exclusion criteria, all patients with neuropathic bladder were included in this study.
Materials And Methods: We evaluated our database of all neurogenic bladder (NB) patients aged <1 year who started urological treatment in our institution from 2018. We evaluated diagnosis, age at first visit, clinical data, prevalence of hydronephrosis and (vesicoureteral reflux) VUR, bladder pattern according to the Leal da Cruz categorization system (1), treatment, time of follow-up, number of clinical visits and (urodynamic evaluation) UE performed, final bladder status and surgeries performed.
Results: We identified 43 were aged <1 year with a mean age of 4.5 months (median 3.5) at first urological appointment. Diagnosis was myelomeningocele in 33 patients and miscellaneous in 10. From the MMC group, 24 were operated in-utero and 9 post-natal. The initial bladder pattern in the whole group showed 23 (53.5%) high risk, 11 normal (25.6%), 5 underactive bladder (11.6%) and 4 incontinent (9.3%). Mean follow-up was 24 months, mean age at last UE (cases with minimum of 2): 37 months, mean UE per patient: 2. At present, 28 patients perform clean intermittent catheterization (CIC), 23 with anticholinergics and 15 are only under surveillance. VUR was seen in 11/43 cases: 25.6%. Urological surgery has been performed in 4 patients: bladder augmentation in 3 and vesicostomy in 1. Bladder categorization for high-risk and normal patterns were respectively 62.5% and 25% for in utero and 44.4% and 22.2% for postnatal repair and detailed statistical analysis did not present statistical significance of in utero and postnatal groups.
Conclusion: Our study can conclude in a contemporary prospective study the findings of elevated incidence of high-risk patterns irrespectively of in-utero or post-natal repair (62.5% and 44.4%). We acknowledge that even though this is not new information and besides the still limited follow up, this cohort is one of the very few that follow and compare in one single institution with comparable UE for in-utero and post-natal MMC repair population, having also a miscellaneous group of NB as a pictorial report of also a similar initial distribution of bladder patterns. We plan to report in the future in a larger cohort the continuation of this study.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jpurol.2024.05.023 | DOI Listing |
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