| Literature DB >> 29928614 |
Sorena Keihani1, Ross E Anderson1, Michelle Fiander2, Mary M McFarland3, Gregory J Stoddard4, James M Hotaling1, Jeremy B Myers1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Collecting system injury and urinary extravasation is an important yet understudied aspect of renal trauma. We aimed to examine the incidence of urinary extravasation and also the rates of ureteral stenting after high-grade renal trauma (HGRT) in adults.Entities:
Keywords: Renal trauma; meta-analysis, ureteral stent; renal injury grading; urinary extravasation; wounds and injuries
Year: 2018 PMID: 29928614 PMCID: PMC5989120 DOI: 10.21037/tau.2018.04.13
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Transl Androl Urol ISSN: 2223-4683
Figure 1Screening and selection of articles (PRISMA flow diagram). PRISMA, Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses
Summary of studies reporting incidence of urinary extravasation after HGRT
| Author year | Study period | Study site | Grading system | Trauma mechanism | No. HGRT | No. urinary extravasation | % of III–V | % of IV–V | % of IV | Note |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Keihani | 2014–2017 | Multi-institutional, USA | AAST-NS | B & P | 326 (III–V) | 72 | 22% (72/326) | NA | NA | Only patients with initial CT scans included |
| Winters | 1998–2010 | Seattle, USA | AAST-O | B & P | 636 (III & IV) | 95 | NA | NA | 60% (95/159) | |
| Takamatsu | 1982–2013 | Yokohama, Japan | JAST | B | 97 (IV & V) | 35 | NA | 36% (35/97) | NA | Japanese |
| Shaaban | NS | Alexandria, Egypt | AAST-R | B & P | 37 (III–V) | 16 | 43% (16/37) | 64% (16/25) | 72% (16/22) | |
| May | 2004–2013 | St. Louis, USA | AAST-NS | B | 47 (IV & V) | 3 | NA | 6% (3/47) | NA | |
| Lanchon | 2004–2013 | Grenoble, France | AAST-O | B | 151 (IV & V) | 96 | NA | 66% (96/151) | NA | Overlap with long 2013 |
| Baghdanian | 2006–2014 | Boston, USA | AAST-R | B | 103 (III–V) | 22 | 21% (22/103) | 52% (22/42) | NA | |
| Parkash | 2008–2013 | Nellore, India | AAST-O | B | 16 (IV only) | 15 | NA | NA | 94% (15/16) | |
| Maarouf | 2007–2014 | Riyadh, KSA | AAST-O | B | 206 (III–V) | 108 | 52% (108/206) | 87% (108/124) | NA | |
| Fischer | 2007–2013 | Indianapolis, USA | AAST-O | B & P | 265 (III–V) | 26 | 10% (26/265) | 27% (26/97) | 26% (21/80) | Excretory phase not performed for all patients |
| Darwish | 2009–2013 | St. Louis, USA | AAST-NS | P | 41 (III–V) | 11 | 27% (11/41) | 65% (11/17) | NA | Abstract only |
| Malaeb | 2003–2010 | Seattle, USA | AAST-R | B | 144 (IV only) | 88 | NA | NA | 61% (88/144) | Overlap with Winters 2016 |
| van der Wilden | 2000–2011 | Multi–institutional, New England, USA | AAST-O | B | 206 (IV & V) | 60 | NA | 29% (60/206) | NA | |
| Long | 2004–2011 | Grenoble, France | AAST-R | B | 99 (IV) | 72 | NA | NA | 73% (72/99) | Overlap with Lanchon 2016 |
| Hardee | 2005–2011 | Salt Lake City, USA | AAST-R | B & P | 126 (III–V) | 18 | 14% (18/126) | 30% (18/61) | NA | |
| Figler | 2003–2010 | Seattle, USA | AAST-O | B | 84 (IV only) | 79 | NA | NA | 94% (79/84) | |
| Fiard | 2004–2010 | Grenoble, France | AAST-O | B | 88 (IV & V) | 51 | NA | 58% (51/88) | 71% (51/71) | Overlap with Long 2013 and Lanchon 2016 |
| Smith | 2003–2007 | Seattle, USA | AAST-O | B | 111 (IV & V) | 81 | NA | 73% (81/111) | 74% (77/104) | Abstract only |
| Nishizawa | 1991–2007 | Wakayama, Japan | JAST | B | 23 (IV & V) | 8 | NA | 35% (8/23) | NA | |
| Malcolm | 2002–2006 | Memphis, USA | AAST-O | B | 109 (III–V) | 7 | 6% (7/109) | 25% (7/28) | 27% (7/26) | |
| Shinojima | 1982–1999 | Yokohama, Japan | JAST | B | 59 (IV & V) | 21 | NA | 36% (21/59) | NA | Japanese |
| Bozeman | 1993–2001 | Shreveport, USA | AAST-O | B | 26 (IV & V) | 18 | NA | 69% (18/26) | 74% (14/19) | |
| Hammer | 1997–2001 | Detroit, USA | AAST-O | B & P | 29 (III–V) | 14 | 48% (14/29) | NA | 100% (14/14) | |
| Matthews | 1983–1997 | Cleveland, USA | AAST-O | B | 46 (III–V) | 31 | 67% (31/46) | 100% (31/31) | 100% (29/29) | Surgical cases excluded; AAST-O with modifications used |
| Total (95% CI) | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA | 29% (17–42%) | 51% (38–64%) | 74% (61–85%) |
a, AAST equivalents of JAST grading used to define high–grade injuries (6). HGRT, high-grade renal trauma; AAST, the American Association for the Surgery of Trauma; AAST-O, original AAST grading [1989] (4); AAST-R, revised AAST grading [2010] (5); JAST, the Japanese Association for the Surgery of Trauma; B, blunt injury; P, penetrating injury; NA, not applicable; NS, not specified.
Figure 2Incidence of urinary extravasation after HGRT for AAST grades III–V (A), IV-only (B), and IV–V (C). HGRT, high-grade renal trauma; AAST, American Association for the Surgery of Trauma; ES, estimate.
Summary of studies reporting rates of ureteral stenting for urinary extravasation after HGRT
| Author year | Trauma mechanism | No. urinary extravasation | No. stented (%) | Comment |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Keihani | B & P | 72 | 17 (24%) | Multi-institutional data from the Genito-Urinary Trauma Study Group; only patients with CT scans available for review were included in the analysis |
| Winters | B & P | 95 | 27 (28%) | Routine follow-up CT scan at 48 h and prophylactic stenting if persistent or worsening leak. Grade V injuries were excluded |
| Shaaban | B & P | 16 | 1 (6%) | |
| May | B | 3 | 1 (33%) | |
| Lanchon | B | 96 | 29 (30%) | Retrograde ureteral stent placement was performed secondarily in patients with symptomatic ureteral clot obstruction or significant urine leakage on subsequent CT |
| Baghdanian | B | 22 | 11 (50%) | High rates of delayed diagnosis and intervention for urinary extravasation (50% missed at the initial imaging) |
| Parkash | B | 15 | 9 (60%) | Treatment protocol of strict bed rest until resolution of gross hematuria, prophylactic antibiotics, and close monitoring; all patients underwent follow-up CT scan after 48 h. Grade V injuries excluded |
| Fischer | B & P | 26 | 12 (46%) | About half of the patients did not undergo excretory phase imaging; number of urinary extravasation may be underestimated |
| Van der Wilden | B | 60 | 24 (40%) | Multi-institutional data; about half the stentings were performed for delayed complications |
| Hardee | B & P | 21 | 9 (43%) | Includes three ureteral injuries; delayed urinary extravasation identified in 7 patients without initial excretory phase imaging |
| Smith | B | 81 | 16 (20%) | |
| Malcolm | B | 7 | 3 (42%) | 3 delayed stenting for persistent urinary extravasation; one patients upgraded to grade IV after follow-up imaging |
| Alsikafi | B & P | 34 | 3 (9%) | Non-operative management included bed rest until resolution of gross hematuria, broad spectrum antibiotics; routine follow-up CT scan at 3–7 days after injury; patients with persistent urinary extravasation received stents |
| Moudouni | B | 20 | 5 (25%) | Management included bed rest until resolution of gross hematuria, broad spectrum antibiotics, and close monitoring |
| Haas | B | 31 | 5 (16%) | Management included bed rest until resolution of gross hematuria, broad spectrum antibiotics, and close follow-up with appropriate radiographic studies |
| Total (95% CI) | NA | NA | 28% (21–36%) |
HGRT, high-grade renal trauma; B, blunt injury; P, penetrating injury.
Figure 3Rates of ureteral stenting after HGRT. HGRT, high-grade renal trauma; ES, estimate.
| 1. Date form completed (dd/mm/yyyy) | |
| 2. Name of person extracting data | |
| 3. Paper title | |
| 4. First author-year | |
| 5. Record number (From EndNote) | |
| 6. Notes |
| Description | |
|---|---|
| Type of study (e.g., retrospective, prospective) | |
| Study location and setting (city, country) | |
| Start date -- End date | |
| Duration of participation | |
| Notes |
| Description | |
|---|---|
| Total No. of participants | |
| Trauma types (blunt, penetrating, both) | |
| No. of HGRT (please indicate the grades defined as high-grade) | |
| Grading system used (original 1989 AAST, Revised 2011 AAST, Other- specify) | |
| No. of renal injuries based on grades | |
| AAST III | |
| AAST IV | |
| AAST V | |
| No. patients with urinary extravasation | |
| Percentage of high grade renal trauma with urinary extravasation (specify the denominator and grades) | |
| Notes |
| Description | |
|---|---|
| Management options listed in the study for urinary extravasation | |
| No. of patients treated conservatively | |
| No. of patients received immediate/delayed stenting | |
| No. of patients with percutaneous nephrostomy | |
| No. of patients with peri-renal drain (if mentioned) | |
| No. of patients needing renorrhaphy for urin.extrav (if mentioned) | |
| No. of patients needing partial nephrectomy for urin.extrav (if mentioned) | |
| No. of patients needing nephrectomy for urin.extrav (if mentioned) | |
| Notes (please explain how the study reports extravasation and its management) |
| Description | |
|---|---|
| No. of urinomas (and%) | |
| No. of other complications | |
| Notes: |