| Literature DB >> 27324264 |
Rachel Oliver1, Hannah Wells1, Olivier Traxer2, Thomas Knoll3, Omar Aboumarzouk4,5, Chandra S Biyani6, Bhaskar K Somani7,8.
Abstract
Short-term ureteric stents are commonly placed after ureteroscopy. The removal usually entails having a cystoscopy, but recently, endourologists have been using stents with extraction strings attached to them for ease of removal. We wanted to conduct a systematic review of literature looking at the outcomes of ureteric stents with extraction strings attached to them. Our objective was to investigate the use, morbidity, tolerability, complications, associated cost, and patient preference of stents with extraction strings attached to them. All studies in English language (between 1990 and 2015) where stents on extraction strings were either self-removed by patients or removed by physician were included. A total of eight studies (1279 patients) were included, of which 483 (38 %) patients had extraction strings for removal. There seemed to be no overall difference in pain scores or urinary symptoms between patients with and without extraction strings, but nearly 10 % of patients suffered stent dislodgement in the group with extraction strings attached. Overall stent dwell time was lower in patients who had their stents removed via extraction strings, and majority of them were able to remove their stents at home. Our study suggests that stents with extraction strings are easy for patient self-removal and can reduce the stent dwell time for patients, thus reducing the duration of morbidity and physical and financial burden to patients. However, this must be balanced against a risk of stent dislodgement and, hence, may not be a good option in all patients.Entities:
Keywords: Extraction; Stent; String; Ureteric; Ureteroscopy
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27324264 PMCID: PMC5852195 DOI: 10.1007/s00240-016-0898-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Urolithiasis ISSN: 2194-7228 Impact factor: 3.436
Fig. 1PRISMA flow diagram summarising literature review
Summary of articles assessing use of ureteric stents on extraction strings [5, 12–17, 21]
| Author | Study type | Journal | Year | Period of review | Country | No. of patients | M:F | Mean age | Comparator | Strings:no strings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pryor | Prospective cohort |
| 1991 | – | USA | 73 | 45:28 | – | Pain score at removal, urinary symptoms | 44:29 |
| (23–72) | ||||||||||
| Bockholt | Retrospective cohort |
| 2012 | June 2009 –June 2010 | USA | 181 | 86:95 | 45.5 | Procedure related events (PREs) | 43:138 |
| York | Prospective questionnaire |
| 2013 | May –Dec 2011 | New Zealand | 50 | 39:11 | 51 (21–77) | Pain score, anxiety, complication rate | 50:0 |
| Kuehaus | Prospective cohort |
| 2013 | Nov 2011–May 2012 | Austria and Germany | 124 | 86:38 | 47 (20–79) | Pain score at removal | 13a:111 |
| Barnes | Prospective RCT |
| 2014 | Oct 2011–May 2013 | USA | 68a | 26:42 | 49 | USSQ, pain score, adverse events | 33:38 |
| Althaus | Retrospective notes review |
| 2015 | – | USA | 512 | 57:41 | 54 | Dislodgement rates | 98:414 |
| Loh-Doyle | Prospective Web-based questionnaire |
| 2015 | May 2013–Dec 2013 | USA | 571 | 183:388 | – | Pain score, removal preferences | 223:348 |
| Kim | Prospective RCT |
| 2015 | July 2012–Nov 2014 | Korea | 114 | 78:36 | 50 | USSQ, VAS, patient preference | 58:56 |
| Total | 1279 | 600:679 | 483:796 | |||||||
RCT randomised controlled trial, PPRE post-procedure related events, USSQ ureteric stent symptom questionnaire, VAS visual analogue scale
aUnderpowered
Summary of complications across articles in literature review
| Overall number of events | Stent dislodgements | Pain score | Urinary symptoms | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Strings | No strings | Strings | No strings | |||
| Pryor | – | – | – | – | No difference | No difference |
| Bockholt | 16 | 46 | 2/43 | – | ||
| York | – | – | – | – | Low (strings) | |
| Kuehaus | – | – | – | – | No difference | |
| Barnes | 13 | 14 | 5/33 | – | No difference | No difference |
| Althaus | 13 | 0 | 13/98 | 0 | ||
| Loh-Doyle | – | – | – | – | No difference | |
| Kim | – | 0 | 3/58 | 0 | ||
| Total | 32 (7.5 %) | 60 (8 %) | 20/232 (9.9 %) | 0 | ||
Summary of outcomes related to tolerability across articles in literature review
| Dwell time (days) | Pain score on removal (0–10) | Patients able to remove own stent at home | Patients who would have strings again | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Strings | No strings | Strings | No strings | Strings only | ||
| Pryor | – | – | 3.9 | 5 | – | – |
| Bockholt | – | – | – | – | 42 (97.7 %) | – |
| York | – | – | 2 | – | 35 (70 %) | 38 (75 %) |
| Kuehaus | – | – | – | – | – | – |
| Barnes | 6.3 | 10.6 | 2.5 | 3.1 | 32 (97 %) | – |
| Althaus | – | – | – | – | – | – |
| Loh-Doyle | – | – | 3.7 | 5.14 | – | 197 (88.2 %) |
| Kim | 6 | 6.2 | 2.9 | 4.2 | – | 16/16 (100 %) |
| Average | 6.3 | 10.6 | 3.0 | 4.41 | 88.2 % | 81.6 % |