| Literature DB >> 32775430 |
Shengwei Xiong1,2,3, Jie Wang1,2,3, Weijie Zhu1,2,3, Kunlin Yang1,2,3, Guangpu Ding1,2,3, Xuesong Li1,2,3, Daniel D Eun4.
Abstract
Ureteroplasty using onlay grafts or flaps emerged as an innovative procedure for the management of proximal and midureteral strictures. Autologous grafts or flaps used commonly in ureteroplasty include the oral mucosae, bladder mucosae, ileal mucosae, and appendiceal mucosae. Oral mucosa grafts, especially buccal mucosa grafts (BMGs), have gained wide acceptance as a graft choice for ureteroplasty. The reported length of BMG ureteroplasty ranged from 1.5 to 11 cm with success rates of 71.4%-100%. However, several studies have demonstrated that ureteroplasty using lingual mucosa grafts yields better recipient site outcomes and fewer donor site complications than that using BMGs. In addition, there is no essential difference in the efficacy and complication rates of BMG ureteroplasty using an anterior approach or a posterior approach. Intestinal graft or flap ureteroplasty was also reported. And the reported length of ileal or appendiceal flap ureteroplasty ranged from 1 to 8 cm with success rates of 75%-100%. Moreover, the bladder mucosa, renal pelvis wall, and penile/preputial skin have also been reported to be used for ureteroplasty and have achieved satisfactory outcomes, but each graft or flap has unique advantages and potential problems. Tissue engineering-based ureteroplasty through the implantation of patched scaffolds, such as the small intestine submucosa, with or without cell seeding, has induced successful ureteral regeneration structurally close to that of the native ureter and has resulted in good functional outcomes in animal models.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32775430 PMCID: PMC7407031 DOI: 10.1155/2020/6178286
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomed Res Int Impact factor: 3.411
Clinical series reports of ureteroplasty using oral mucosa grafts.
| Authors and year | Patients ( | Type of the graft | Length of repair (cm) | Follow-up (months) | Donor site complications | Recipient site complications | Success ratec (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Naude (1999) [ | 4 | BMG (open onlay 3; tube 1) | 4a | 3-72 | Not determined | None | 100 |
| Shailesh et al. (2003) [ | 5 | BMG (open onlay) | 5.5-9.0 | 18-42 | Not determined | None | 100 |
| Kroepfl et al. (2009) [ | 7 | BMG (open onlay) | 3-11 | 10-85 | Not determined | Restenosis in 2 (one occurred 39 months later; another 17 months) | 71.4 (5/7) |
| Badawy et al. (2010) [ | 5 | BMG (open onlay) | 3.5-5.0 | 14-39 | Not determined | None | 100 |
| Pandey et al. (2014) [ | 3 | BMG (open onlay) | 4-6 | 26-50 | Not determined | None | 100 |
| Zhao et al. (2015) [ | 4 | BMG (robotic onlay, anterior in 2, posterior in 2) | 1.5-6.0 | 10.7-18.6 | Not determined | None | 100 |
| Li et al. (2016) [ | 1b | LMG (laparoscopic onlay) | 4 | 9 | None | None | 100 |
| Tsaturyan et al. (2016) [ | 5 | BMG (open onlay) | 2.5-5.0 | 26-52 | Not determined | None | 100 |
| Lee et al. (2017) [ | 12 | BMG (robotic onlay) | 2-5 | 4-30 | Not determined | Stricture recurrence in 2 | 83.3 (10/12) |
| Ahn et al. (2017) [ | 3 | BMG (robotic onlay) | 2.5-6 | 5-26 | None | None | 100 |
| Zhao et al. (2018) [ | 19 | BMG (robotic onlay, ventrally in 15, dorsally in 4) | 2-8 | 13-44 | Not determined | Restenosis in 2 (one occurred 1 year later, another 6 weeks) | 89.4 (17/19) |
| Hefermehl et al. (2020) [ | 4 | BMG (open onlay) | 3-5 | 12-14 | Difficulties to whistle in 1 | None | 100 |
aAuthors only mentioned the reconstructed length of tube graft; b first report of ureteroplasty using lingual mucosa graft; csuccess was defined as patent drainage and free of stricture recurrence.
Clinical series reports of onlay ureteroplasty using autologous grafts (excepting OMG).
| Authors and year | Patients ( | Type of the graft | Length of repair (cm) | Follow-up (months) | Donor site complications | Recipient site complications | Success rateb (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gomez-avraham et al. (1994) [ | 4 | Ileal flap (open onlay) | 2-6 | 6-18 | Not determined | None | 100 |
| Ordorica et al. (2014) [ | 9 | Ileal graft in 7, appendiceal graft in 2 (open onlay) | 5-8 | 12-78 | None | Ureteral fistula in 1 | 88.9 (8/9) |
| Duty et al. (2015) [ | 6 | Appendiceal flap (laparoscopic onlay) | 1-6 | 3.8-30.4 | Not determined | None | 100 |
| Wang et al. (2020) [ | 9 | Appendiceal flap (laparoscopic onlay in 5, robotic onlay in 4) | 3-4.5 | 4-10 | None | None | 100 |
| Macauley and Frohbose (1970) [ | 9 | Renal pelvis wall graft (onlay) | Not determined | 12 | Delayed emptying of the renal pelvis in 3 | None | 75 (9/12) |
| Urban et al. (1994) [ | 6 | Bladder urothelial graft | 1.5-8 | 15-54 | None | Stricture recurrence in 2 (occurred 15 and 12 months later) | 66.7 (4/6) |
| Onal et al. (2018) [ | 1a | Preputial skin patch graft | 5 | 12 | None | None | 100 |
| Pompeius et al. (1977) [ | 4 | Vein patch graft | 2-3 | 6-120 | Not determined | None | 100 |
aFirst report of ureteroplasty using preputial skin patch graft. bSuccess was defined as patent drainage and free of stricture recurrence and fistula.
Figure 1Ureteroplasty using the onlay repair technique (taking robotic appendiceal onlay flap ureteroplasty as an example) [66]. (a) Partial circumference of the strictured ureter was removed to create a ureteral plate; thereafter, the appendix was excised from the colon retaining blood vessel pedicle; then, it was incised longitudinally on its antimesenteric border, forming an appendiceal flap. (b) The appendiceal flap was mobilized to finish the anastomosis with the ureteral plate.
Preclinical studies regarding tissue engineering-based ureteroplasty.
| Authors and year | Animal model, | Type of scaffold | Length of repair (cm) | Follow-up (weeks) | Functional outcomes of recipient site | Regeneration outcomes of recipient site |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Liatsikos et al. (2001) [ | Pig (F), 6 | SIS (onlay) | 7 | 7 | Good patency and anastomoses | U, S, N |
| Smith et al. (2002) [ | Pig (F), 9 | SIS (onlay) | 2 | 9 | Good patency | U (with focal intestinal metaplasia), S, N |
| Greca et al. (2004) [ | Pig, 10 | SIS (onlay) | 2 | 5.7 | Good patency in 7, fistula in 1, restenosis in 2 | U and N (in 100% cases), S (in 87.5%) |
| Duchene et al. (2004) [ | Pig, 12 | SIS (onlay in 5, tube in 7) | 2 | 6 or 9 | Patent in patch group, complete obstruction in tube group | Patch group: U, S, Fi, and I (mild); tube group: U, S (partial), F (dense) |
| El-Hakim et al. (2005) [ | Pig (F), 8 | SIS (tube)+UCs/SMCs | 5 | 6 | Contraction and stenosis | U, S, Fi (dense) |
| de Jonge et al. (2018) [ | Pig (F), 20 | Collagen-Vicryl (tube) | 5 | 12.8 | Contraction | U (in 32% cases), S (in 50%), N |
| de Jonge et al. (2018) [ | Goat (F), 12 | Collagen-Vicryl (tube)+subcutis | 1.5-3.5 | 12.8 | Patent in 8, urine leakage in 2, stenosis in 2 | U, N, S (limited to the anastomosis sites), I (mild) |
F: female; SIS: small intestine submucosa; UCs: urothelial cells; SMCs” smooth muscle cells; U: urothelial regeneration; S: smooth muscle ingrowth; N: neovascularization; Fi: fibrosis; I: inflammation.
Characteristics of the reported autologous patch grafts for ureteroplasty.
| Drafts | Advantages | Disadvantages |
|---|---|---|
| Buccal mucosa graft | Easy to harvest and handle, tolerance to wet environment, good graft “take” | Adversely affected by smoking and betel quid chewing; donor site morbidity such as persistent difficulty with mouth opening and latent parotid duct injury |
| Lingual mucosa graft | Easy to harvest, tolerance to wet environment, obtainable long-segment graft harvesting, good graft “take”, acceptable donor site morbidity | Thin and relatively hard to handle; potential donor site morbidity such as difficulty with fine motor of the tongue and slurred speech |
| Ileal mucosa flap | Much less intestine needed than simple replacement, much diminished risk of metabolic derangement and mucous production | More difficult to harvest and handle; infeasible when ileal inflammation or other diseases occur; potential donor site complications including intestinal anastomotic infection or leak, anastomotic hemorrhage or stenosis, and adhesive or paralytic intestinal obstruction |
| Appendiceal flap | Much less intestine needed than simple replacement, much diminished risk of metabolic derangement and mucous production, maintaining its own blood supply from the appendicular artery | Infeasible when appendiceal inflammation or calculus occurs; potential donor site complications including intestinal anastomotic leak |
| Renal pelvis wall graft | Grafts close to reconstructed field, similar to the tissue characteristics of the ureter | Limited data; limited area of graft harvesting; preferably to reconstruct the obstruction of ureteropelvic junction; large graft harvesting may damage the neuromuscular mechanism of renal pelvis |
| Bladder mucosa graft | Obtainable long-segment graft harvesting, tolerance to urine corrosion, and minimized stone formation | Donor site morbidity; complications including stricture, hypertrophy, prolapse of the reconstructed site |
| Penile/preputial skin graft | Devoid of hair and fat, easy to harvest and handle | Limited data; high recurrence of contracture and restenosis |
| Vein patch graft | Easier to harvest and handle; usually available nearby the spermatic or ovarian vein | Limited data; confined to repairing short strictures; complications including fibrosis and restenosis of the reconstructed ureters |