Stephan Bloesch1, Devesh Misra2, Amir Tan Mohd-Amin1. 1. Department of Paediatric Urology, Royal London Hospital, London, E1 1BB, UK. 2. Department of Paediatric Urology, Royal London Hospital, London, E1 1BB, UK. devesh.misra@nhs.net.
Abstract
PURPOSE: To review our management of urethral fistulae following hypospadias repair over a 24-year period. To showcase our innovations, particularly the purse-string closure technique. METHODS: We reviewed our prospectively maintained database from 1997 to 2020 to identify patients with fistula. Two main surgical techniques were used: traditional linear closure and purse-string suture. Other innovations included anchoring skin to corpora and intersectional skin closure. RESULTS: Sixty two patients presented with 73 urethral fistulae after hypospadias repair. 55/62 were operated: 28-purse-string technique, 23-linear closure, 4-redo urethroplasty. Cure after the first attempt was achieved in 26/28 (93%) in the purse-string group and 16/23 (70%) in the linear group (p = 0.015). Spontaneous resolution occurred in 6/62 patients (9.6%), in 3 spontaneously and in 3 after a single dilation. 1 patient awaits surgery. Closure after first fistula repair was 22/24 (92%) in distal hypospadias and 20/27 (74%) in proximal hypospadias (p = 0.051). CONCLUSION: Remarkably, conservative management was succesful in almost 10% of urethral fistulae, either spontaneously or after a single dilation. Purse-string closure, rarely described in the literature, coupled with our other innovations, helped bring down our recurrence rates significantly with no patient needing more than two surgeries for cure.
PURPOSE: To review our management of urethral fistulae following hypospadias repair over a 24-year period. To showcase our innovations, particularly the purse-string closure technique. METHODS: We reviewed our prospectively maintained database from 1997 to 2020 to identify patients with fistula. Two main surgical techniques were used: traditional linear closure and purse-string suture. Other innovations included anchoring skin to corpora and intersectional skin closure. RESULTS: Sixty two patients presented with 73 urethral fistulae after hypospadias repair. 55/62 were operated: 28-purse-string technique, 23-linear closure, 4-redo urethroplasty. Cure after the first attempt was achieved in 26/28 (93%) in the purse-string group and 16/23 (70%) in the linear group (p = 0.015). Spontaneous resolution occurred in 6/62 patients (9.6%), in 3 spontaneously and in 3 after a single dilation. 1 patient awaits surgery. Closure after first fistula repair was 22/24 (92%) in distal hypospadias and 20/27 (74%) in proximal hypospadias (p = 0.051). CONCLUSION: Remarkably, conservative management was succesful in almost 10% of urethral fistulae, either spontaneously or after a single dilation. Purse-string closure, rarely described in the literature, coupled with our other innovations, helped bring down our recurrence rates significantly with no patient needing more than two surgeries for cure.
Authors: Ahmed Mahmoud Al Adl; Rabea Gomaa Omar; Ahmed Mohey; Ahmed Abd El Naeem El Mogy; Tarek Mohammed El Karamany Journal: Res Rep Urol Date: 2019-10-21