| Literature DB >> 29522293 |
Sarah Prattley1, James Voss1, Stephanie Cheung1, Robert Geraghty1, Patrick Jones1, Bhaskar K Somani1.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To assess outcomes of ureteroscopy for treatment of stone disease in the elderly. Ureteroscopy (URS) is an increasingly popular treatment modality for urolithiasis and its applications are ever expanding with the development of newer technologies. Its feasibility and outcomes within the elderly population to our knowledge remain under-reported.Entities:
Keywords: Calculi; Therapeutics; Ureteroscopy
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29522293 PMCID: PMC6092651 DOI: 10.1590/S1677-5538.IBJU.2017.0516
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int Braz J Urol ISSN: 1677-5538 Impact factor: 1.541
Patient demographics and stone location (PUJ – pelvic-ureteric junction).
| No. of patients (procedures) | 110 (121) | |
|---|---|---|
| Mean age, years (range) | 77.2 years (70-91 years) | |
| 70-75 | 43 | |
| 75-80 | 35 | |
| 80-85 | 29 | |
| >85 | 14 | |
| ASA I/II/III/IV | 7/63/50/1 | |
| Median age, years | 77 | |
| Pre-operative creatinine (μmol/L), mean±SD | 104±57 | |
| Pre-operative stent n(%) | 32 (26%) | |
| Pre-operative positive urine culture (appropriately treated pre-operatively) n (%) | 32 (26%) | |
| Multiple stones n (%) | 40 (32%) | |
|
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| Upper pole, n (%) | 2 (2%) | |
| Middle pole, n (%) | 4 (3%) | |
| Lower pole, n (%) | 16 (13%) | |
| PUJ / Renal pelvis, n (%) | 13 (11%) | |
| Upper ureter, n (%) | 6 (5%) | |
| Middle ureter, n (%) | 15 (12%) | |
| Lower ureter, n (%) | 24 (20%) | |
|
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| Multiple ureteric n(%) | 15 (12%) | |
| Multiple Renal n(%) | 16 (13%) | |
| Multiple ureteric and renal n(%) | 9 (7%) | |
| Mean largest individual stone diameter (range) | 10.6 (3-37) | |
| Mean cumulative stone diameter, mm (range) | 17.1 (3-156) | |
Operative details and patient outcomes.
| Operative details | ||
|---|---|---|
| Mean operative time (minutes)±SD | 50±25 | |
| Use of an access sheath (%) | 43 (36%) | |
| Length of stay (days), mean (range) | 2.1 (0-90) | |
| Day case | 88 (73%) | |
| <24 hours | 19 (16%) | |
| 1-3 days | 5 (4%) | |
| >3 days | 8 (7%) | |
| Post-operative drainage (JJ stent, ureteric catheter, stent on string), n (%) | 118 (98%) | |
|
| ||
| Calcium Oxalate | 66 (64.1%) | |
| Calcium Phosphate | 28 (27.2%) | |
| Magnesium Phosphate | 5 (4.9%) | |
| Uric Acid | 4 (3.9%) | |
| Singular Stone Composition | 59 (65.6%) | |
| Mixed Stone Composition | 31 (34.4%) | |
| Surgical complications, n(%) | 11 (9%) | |
| Acute urinary retention (Clavien I/II) | 4 (3%) | |
| Urosepsis (Clavien IV) | 1 (1%) | |
| Urinary tract infection (Clavien I/II) | 4 (3%) | |
| Post-operative stent pain (Clavien I/II) | 1 (1%) | |
| Pneumonia (Clavien I/II) | 1 (1%) | |
| Overnight stay for social reasons (frail, stay alone) | 12 (10%) | |
| Overnight stay for patients who underwent elective catheterisation | 6 (5%) | |
| Initial stone free rate (SFR) | 97 (88%) | |
| Final SFR | 107 (97%) | |
Patient demographics across other studies reported in the literature.
| Study | Type of study | Country of origin of study | Number of Patients (procedures) | Definition of elderly (years) | Mean Age, years ± SD (range) | Mean largest individual stone diameter, mm ± SD (range) | Mean cumulative stone diameter, mm ± SD (range) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Akman et al. 2012 ( | Prospective | Turkey | 28 | >65 | 68.9±4.1 | 15 to 30 (no mean available) | / |
| Tolga-Gulpinar et al. 2015 ( | Retrospective | Turkey | 170 | >60 | 66.5 (61-87) | / | 17.2 (7.2) |
| Hu et al. 2016 ( | Retrospective | China | 80 | >60 | 65.1±5.2 | / | 15.8 (3.4) |
| Yoshioka et al. 2016 ( | Retrospective | Japan | 42 | 65-74 | 69.26±2.92 | 9.56±3.27 | / |
| 39 | >75 | 79.46±4.69 | 8.80±3.16 | / | |||
| Berardinelli et al. 2017 ( | Prospective | Italy | 91 | >65 | 72.1±5.06 | / | 13.05 (5.79) |
| Current Study | Prospective | UK | 110 (121) | >70 | 77.2 (70-91) | 10.6 (3-37) | 17.1 (3-156) |
Nature of complications across all studies.
| Study | Overall Complications, n (%) | Complications | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Akman et al. 2012 ( | 2 (7.1%) | Renal colic (n=2) | |
| Tolga-Gulpinar et al. 2015 ( | 26 (15.1%) | Intraoperative surgical comp's (n=13); Perioperative medical comp's (n=2); Post-operative infection (n=11) | |
| Hu et al. 2016 ( | 11 (13.7%) | Septic shock (n=1); N+V (n=1); Fever (n=9); | |
| Yoshioka et al. 2016 ( | 5 (11.9%) | Post-operative pyelonephritis (n=5) | |
| 65-74 Years | |||
| >75 Years | 5 (12.8%) | Post-operative pyelonephritis (n=5) | |
| Berardinelli et al. 2017 ( | 9 (9.9%) | Bleeding (n=2); Fever (n=3); Perforation of pelvis/calyx (n=2); ureteral injury (n=1); non-obstructive pyelonephritis (n=1) | |
| Current Study | 11 (9%) | Urosepsis (n=1); Acute urinary retention (n=4); UTI (n=4); Pain (n=1); Pneumonia (n=1) | |
Operative details in other studies reported in the literature.
| Study | Mean Operative time, mins ± SD (range) | Access Sheath use (%) | LOS, mean days ± SD (range) median | Initial SFR (%) | Final SFR (%) | Complications, n (%) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Akman et al. 2012 ( | 64.5±20.9 | N/A | 1.1±0.44 | 82.10% | 92.80% | 2 (7.1%) | |
| Tolga-Gulpinar et al. 2015 ( | 53±23.4 | 82.50% | 1.6 (1-18) | N/A | 81.10% | 14 (7.6%) | |
| Hu et al. 2016 ( | 75.9±34.0 | 100% | 5.6±2.4 | 40.80% | 65.80% | 11 (13.75%) | |
| Yoshioka et al. 2016 ( | |||||||
| 65-74 Years | 72.43±30.51 | N/A | N/A | N/A | 78.57% | 5 (11.9%) | |
| >75 Years | 70.67±30.58 | N/A | N/A | N/A | 92.31% | 5 (12.82%) | |
| Berardinelli et al. 2017 ( | 64.31±31.87 | 82.40% | 2.8±1.8 | 65.93% | N/A | 9 (9.89%) | |
| Current Study | 50.0±25.0 | 36% | 0 days (median) | 88% | 97% | 11 (9%) | |