1. Streamlined surgical approach for coexistent urethral stricture and benign prostatic enlargement: feasibility, safety and patency results.
- Author
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Scherñuk, Jordán, Tinajero, Juan Diego, Tirapegui, Federico, González, Mariano Sebastián, Giudice, Carlos Roberto, and Favre, Gabriel Andrés
- Subjects
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BENIGN prostatic hyperplasia , *TRANSURETHRAL prostatectomy , *ENDOSCOPIC surgery , *URETHRA stricture , *PROSTATE hypertrophy , *URETHROPLASTY - Abstract
Purpose: To evaluate the technical feasibility, safety, and patency results of a simultaneous surgical approach to repair urethral stricture and treat benign prostatic enlargement endoscopically in a highly selected group of patients at a tertiary referral center. We hypothesize that this is technically feasible, safe, and does not affect urethroplasty outcomes. Methods: A retrospective review of adult men who underwent simultaneous urethroplasty and endoscopic prostatic surgery between May 2017 and May 2024 at our institution was conducted. Patients with strictures < 15 French and prostates with adverse prognostic features of response to medical treatment were included. The primary outcome was technical feasibility and safety. The secondary outcome was stricture-free survival. Results: Twenty men were treated during the study period. The median length of the urethral stricture was 3.0 cm (IQR 2.0–5.0), and the median size of the prostate was 95.0 cc (IQR 63.3–128.3). All patients were treated successfully with a median operative time of 194.5 min (IQR 180.0–246.8), and no procedures required conversion to a staged procedure or open prostatectomy. There were seven Clavien–Dindo I–II complications and one Clavien–Dindo IIIb complication (hematuria requiring endoscopic clot evacuation). At 22 months follow-up, two cases of urethral re-stricture were diagnosed, with one case requiring redo urethroplasty, though none had previous major complications. Conclusion: The combination of urethroplasty and endoscopic surgery for benign prostatic enlargement at the same stage appears to be technically viable and safe, and it does not compromise medium-term urethral patency results in a carefully selected group of patients. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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