Cargando…

Which has more complications?—Shockwave lithotripsy versus endoscopic treatment of renal calculi with 1‐year follow‐up in an Australian population

INTRODUCTION AND OBJECTIVES: Renal calculi are a common medical problem with incidence rates calculated to be approximately 6%‐9% in men & 3%‐4% in women worldwide. Incidence appears to be increasing. This study compares emergency presentations and unplanned readmissions between extracorporeal s...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Farag, Matthew, Jack, Gregory S., Papa, Nathan, Wong, Lih‐Ming, Bolton, Damien M., Lenaghan, Daniel
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8988777/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35475295
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/bco2.71
_version_ 1784683038628642816
author Farag, Matthew
Jack, Gregory S.
Papa, Nathan
Wong, Lih‐Ming
Bolton, Damien M.
Lenaghan, Daniel
author_facet Farag, Matthew
Jack, Gregory S.
Papa, Nathan
Wong, Lih‐Ming
Bolton, Damien M.
Lenaghan, Daniel
author_sort Farag, Matthew
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION AND OBJECTIVES: Renal calculi are a common medical problem with incidence rates calculated to be approximately 6%‐9% in men & 3%‐4% in women worldwide. Incidence appears to be increasing. This study compares emergency presentations and unplanned readmissions between extracorporeal shock wave lithotripsy (SWL) and pyeloscopic stone treatment in the population of Victoria, Australia after 1‐year follow‐up. METHODS: This is a population study comparing all patients with renal calculi electively treated with SWL to those initially treated with flexible ureteroscopy (URS) in Victoria, Australia. We used data linkage across the state of Victoria to follow patients treated with either modality in a 12 months period (with no urological surgery in the prior 12 months). Each patient's emergency presentations and subsequent re‐admissions were followed up for 1 year after their index treatment to assess for stone complications. We assessed for selection bias between the two patient groups by comparing age, gender, insurance status, geographical location, and comorbidity scores. RESULTS: We report stone‐related complications for 739 flexible URS and 1317 SWL procedures undertaken across public and private hospitals in Victoria over 12 months. Unplanned emergency presentations within 60‐days of surgery were (22/739) 2.98% for flexible URS patients and (83/1317) 6.30% for SWL patients (P = .001); however, at 12 months, this became 16.23% (120/739) for flexible URS patients and 12.83% (169/1317) for SWL patients (P = .034). Flexible URS patients were more likely than SWL patients to be admitted with 71.76% of flexible URS versus 53.97% of SWL patients requiring an admission at any given emergency presentation (P ≤ .001) within 12 months. On multivariate analysis, both flexible URS ([OR] 1.67, CI 1.23‐2.26, P = .001) and being a public patient ([OR] 3.06, CI 2.24‐4.18, P < .001) significantly increased the likelihood that patients required an unplanned re‐admission within 12 months. CONCLUSIONS: There is work needed to reduce emergency presentations and unplanned re‐admissions after both SWL and flexible URS. At 12‐months follow‐up, unplanned emergency visits and re‐admission rates were significantly more after flexible URS. Symptoms at emergency presentation indicate that better education regarding stent management is needed, especially in the public health care system.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-8988777
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2021
publisher John Wiley and Sons Inc.
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-89887772022-04-25 Which has more complications?—Shockwave lithotripsy versus endoscopic treatment of renal calculi with 1‐year follow‐up in an Australian population Farag, Matthew Jack, Gregory S. Papa, Nathan Wong, Lih‐Ming Bolton, Damien M. Lenaghan, Daniel BJUI Compass ORIGINAL ARTICLES INTRODUCTION AND OBJECTIVES: Renal calculi are a common medical problem with incidence rates calculated to be approximately 6%‐9% in men & 3%‐4% in women worldwide. Incidence appears to be increasing. This study compares emergency presentations and unplanned readmissions between extracorporeal shock wave lithotripsy (SWL) and pyeloscopic stone treatment in the population of Victoria, Australia after 1‐year follow‐up. METHODS: This is a population study comparing all patients with renal calculi electively treated with SWL to those initially treated with flexible ureteroscopy (URS) in Victoria, Australia. We used data linkage across the state of Victoria to follow patients treated with either modality in a 12 months period (with no urological surgery in the prior 12 months). Each patient's emergency presentations and subsequent re‐admissions were followed up for 1 year after their index treatment to assess for stone complications. We assessed for selection bias between the two patient groups by comparing age, gender, insurance status, geographical location, and comorbidity scores. RESULTS: We report stone‐related complications for 739 flexible URS and 1317 SWL procedures undertaken across public and private hospitals in Victoria over 12 months. Unplanned emergency presentations within 60‐days of surgery were (22/739) 2.98% for flexible URS patients and (83/1317) 6.30% for SWL patients (P = .001); however, at 12 months, this became 16.23% (120/739) for flexible URS patients and 12.83% (169/1317) for SWL patients (P = .034). Flexible URS patients were more likely than SWL patients to be admitted with 71.76% of flexible URS versus 53.97% of SWL patients requiring an admission at any given emergency presentation (P ≤ .001) within 12 months. On multivariate analysis, both flexible URS ([OR] 1.67, CI 1.23‐2.26, P = .001) and being a public patient ([OR] 3.06, CI 2.24‐4.18, P < .001) significantly increased the likelihood that patients required an unplanned re‐admission within 12 months. CONCLUSIONS: There is work needed to reduce emergency presentations and unplanned re‐admissions after both SWL and flexible URS. At 12‐months follow‐up, unplanned emergency visits and re‐admission rates were significantly more after flexible URS. Symptoms at emergency presentation indicate that better education regarding stent management is needed, especially in the public health care system. John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2021-07-01 /pmc/articles/PMC8988777/ /pubmed/35475295 http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/bco2.71 Text en © 2021 The Authors. BJUI Compass published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of BJU International Company https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article under the terms of the http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle ORIGINAL ARTICLES
Farag, Matthew
Jack, Gregory S.
Papa, Nathan
Wong, Lih‐Ming
Bolton, Damien M.
Lenaghan, Daniel
Which has more complications?—Shockwave lithotripsy versus endoscopic treatment of renal calculi with 1‐year follow‐up in an Australian population
title Which has more complications?—Shockwave lithotripsy versus endoscopic treatment of renal calculi with 1‐year follow‐up in an Australian population
title_full Which has more complications?—Shockwave lithotripsy versus endoscopic treatment of renal calculi with 1‐year follow‐up in an Australian population
title_fullStr Which has more complications?—Shockwave lithotripsy versus endoscopic treatment of renal calculi with 1‐year follow‐up in an Australian population
title_full_unstemmed Which has more complications?—Shockwave lithotripsy versus endoscopic treatment of renal calculi with 1‐year follow‐up in an Australian population
title_short Which has more complications?—Shockwave lithotripsy versus endoscopic treatment of renal calculi with 1‐year follow‐up in an Australian population
title_sort which has more complications?—shockwave lithotripsy versus endoscopic treatment of renal calculi with 1‐year follow‐up in an australian population
topic ORIGINAL ARTICLES
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8988777/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35475295
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/bco2.71
work_keys_str_mv AT faragmatthew whichhasmorecomplicationsshockwavelithotripsyversusendoscopictreatmentofrenalcalculiwith1yearfollowupinanaustralianpopulation
AT jackgregorys whichhasmorecomplicationsshockwavelithotripsyversusendoscopictreatmentofrenalcalculiwith1yearfollowupinanaustralianpopulation
AT papanathan whichhasmorecomplicationsshockwavelithotripsyversusendoscopictreatmentofrenalcalculiwith1yearfollowupinanaustralianpopulation
AT wonglihming whichhasmorecomplicationsshockwavelithotripsyversusendoscopictreatmentofrenalcalculiwith1yearfollowupinanaustralianpopulation
AT boltondamienm whichhasmorecomplicationsshockwavelithotripsyversusendoscopictreatmentofrenalcalculiwith1yearfollowupinanaustralianpopulation
AT lenaghandaniel whichhasmorecomplicationsshockwavelithotripsyversusendoscopictreatmentofrenalcalculiwith1yearfollowupinanaustralianpopulation