| Literature DB >> 21695451 |
Abstract
Vesicoureteral reflux (VUR) is the most common uropathy affecting children. Compared to children without VUR, those with VUR have a higher rate of pyelonephritis and renal scarring following urinary tract infection (UTI). Options for treatment include observation with or without antibiotic prophylaxis and surgical repair. Surgical intervention may be necessary in patients with persistent reflux, renal scarring, and recurrent or breakthrough febrile UTI. Both open and endoscopic approaches to reflux correction are successful and reduce the occurrence of febrile UTI. Estimated success rates of open and endoscopic reflux correction are 98.1% (95% CI 95.1, 99.1) and 83.0% (95% CI 69.1, 91.4), respectively. Factors that affect the success of endoscopic injection include pre-operative reflux grade and presence of functional or anatomic bladder abnormalities including voiding dysfunction and duplicated collecting systems. Few studies have evaluated the long-term outcomes of endoscopic injection, and with variable results. In patients treated endoscopically, recurrent febrile UTI occurred in 0-21%, new renal damage in 9-12%, and recurrent reflux in 17-47.6% of treated ureters with at least 1 year follow-up. These studies highlight the need for standardized outcome reporting and longer follow-up after endoscopic treatment.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21695451 PMCID: PMC3288369 DOI: 10.1007/s00467-011-1933-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pediatr Nephrol ISSN: 0931-041X Impact factor: 3.714
Fig. 1International classification of Vesicoureteral reflux [11], used with permission
Open Surgery
The illustrations used in this table are from the references 24, 26, 27, 30, and are used with permission.
Fig. 2STING [34], used with permission
Fig. 3Double HIT [34], used with permission
Fig. 4Injection sites bulking material is injected at sites 1 and 2 for the double HIT method, and site 3 for the STING method [34], used with permission
Fig. 5Morphology of injected mound
Outcomes of single endoscopic injection with DHA
| LOE | Study | Year | Patients/ureters | Pre-op VUR grade | Success ratea | Last VCUG years after Tx | Patients/ureters w/late VCUG | Recurrent VUR No ureters (%)b | Febrile UTI No patients (%) | NF-UTI No patients (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1b | Läckgren [ | 2001 | 221/334 | 3–5 | 54%* | 2–5 | 49/77 | 13 (17%) G3-4 | 8/221 (3.5%) | 11/221 (4.8%) |
| 20 (26%) G2-4 | ||||||||||
| 1b | Oswald [ | 2002 | 38/56 | 2–4 | 71.4%* | 1 | 22/32 | 10 (31.2%) | – | – |
| 62.5%** | ||||||||||
| 2b | Kirsch [ | 2003 | 180ζ/292 | 1–4 | 72%** | – | – | – | – | – |
| 1a | Elderc [ | 2006 | 5,527/8,101 | 1–5 | 75.7%*** | – | – | – | 0.75% | 6% |
| 2b | Lee [ | 2009 | 219/337 | 1–5 | 73%** | 1 | −/150 | 39 (26%) | – | – |
| 2b | Chertin [ | 2009 | 507/696 PTFE or DHA | 1–5 | 68%** | 1–12 | 11/- | 8 (72.7%)ψ (3 DHA) | 11/507 (2.2%) (3 DHA) | 28/507 (5.6%) |
| 2b | Hsieh [ | 2010 | 166/265 | 1–5 | 86.4%** | 1 | 44/- | – | 0/44 (0%) | 11/44 (25%) |
| 1b | Holmdahl [ | 2010 | 66/82 | 3–4 | 54.5%* | 2 | 52/63 | 30 (47.6%) G2-4 | 14/66 (21%) | – |
| Brandström [ | 52%** | 66/- | 13 (20%)ψ G3-4 | |||||||
| 2a | Routh [ | 2010 | −/7,303 | 1–5 | 77%*** | – | – | – | – | – |
aAll reported as per-ureter success rate following single injection except Läckgren and Kirsch (per-patient success rate)
bAll reported as per ureter recurrence rate except Chertin and Holmdahl (per-patient recurrence rate)
cAnalysis includes studies using non-DHA bulking agents
LOE Level of evidence; NF Non-febrile
*Success ≤ grade 1 reflux
**Success = no reflux
***Success varies with each author’s definition
ψPer-patient recurrence rate
ζ134 patients had 3-month follow-up and were included in analysis