Multi-Institutional Outcomes of Endoscopic Management of Stricture Recurrence after Bulbar Urethroplasty

Shyam Sukumar, Sean P. Elliott, Jeremy B. Myers, Bryan B. Voelzke, Thomas G. Smith, Alexandra M.C. Carolan, Michael Maidaa, Alex J. Vanni, Benjamin N. Breyer, Bradley A. Erickson

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

19 Scopus citations

Abstract

Purpose: Approximately 10% to 20% of patients will have a recurrence after urethroplasty. Initial management of these recurrences is often by urethral dilation or direct vision internal urethrotomy. In the current study we describe the outcomes of endoscopic management of stricture recurrence after bulbar urethroplasty. Materials and Methods: We retrospectively reviewed bulbar urethroplasty data from 5 surgeons in the TURNS (Trauma and Urologic Reconstruction Network of Surgeons). Men who underwent urethral dilation or direct vision internal urethrotomy for urethroplasty recurrence were identified. Recurrence was defined as the inability to pass a 17Fr cystoscope through the area of reconstruction. The primary outcome was the success rate of recurrence management. Comparisons were made between urethral dilation and direct vision internal urethrotomy, and then between endoscopic management of recurrences after excision and primary anastomosis urethroplasty vs substitutional repairs using time to event statistics. Results: In 53 men recurrence was initially managed endoscopically. Median time to urethral stricture recurrence after urethroplasty was 5 months. At a median followup of 5 months the overall success rate was 42%. Success after urethral dilation was significantly less than after direct vision internal urethrotomy (1 of 10 patients or 10% vs 21 of 43 or 49%, p <0.001) with a failure HR of 3.15 (p = 0.03). Direct vision internal urethrotomy was more effective after substitutional failure than after excision and primary anastomosis urethroplasty (53% vs 13%, p = 0.005). Conclusions: Direct vision internal urethrotomy was more successful than urethral dilation in the management of stricture recurrence after bulbar urethroplasty. Direct vision internal urethrotomy was more successful in patients with recurrence after substitution urethroplasty compared to after excision and primary anastomosis urethroplasty. Perhaps this indicates a different mechanism of recurrence for excision and primary anastomosis urethroplasty (ischemic) vs substitution urethroplasty (nonischemic).

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)837-842
Number of pages6
JournalJournal of Urology
Volume200
Issue number4
DOIs
StatePublished - Oct 2018

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2018 American Urological Association Education and Research, Inc.

Keywords

  • anastomosis
  • dilatation
  • ischemia
  • recurrence
  • surgical
  • urethral stricture

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