Ureteric Stent in Renal Transplantation
Abstract Introduction Several techniques can be used to accomplish the ureteroneocystostomy in kidney transplantation. A ureteral catheter is a prophylactic measure to avoid urological complications (UC) of stenosis and/or fistula. In this study we evaluate the influence of using a ureteral stent up...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Transplantation proceedings 2013-04, Vol.45 (3), p.1099-1101 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Abstract Introduction Several techniques can be used to accomplish the ureteroneocystostomy in kidney transplantation. A ureteral catheter is a prophylactic measure to avoid urological complications (UC) of stenosis and/or fistula. In this study we evaluate the influence of using a ureteral stent upon the rate of UC in renal transplantation. Patients and methods Retrospective review of 2061 kidney transplants (75 living and 1986 cadaveric donors) for 1360 male and 684 female recipients, from July 14, 1991, to January 13, 2012, with a minimum follow-up of 6 months A double J stent (JJ) was used in 1890 an external tumor (ET) catheter in 52 and no catheter (NC) in 119 cases. Results Mean recipient age was 44.66 ± 13.66 years. UC occurred in 5.9% among which ET showed 17.3%, 8.4% for NC, and 5.4% for JJ ( P < .0005). Urological complications were more frequent when surgery duration exceeded 3 hours (8.8% vs 5.3% ≤ 3 hours; P = .003), using older donors organs ( P = .048) and with higher donor weight ( P = .009). No differences were observed related to recipient age, gender, or weight; donor gender; pretransplant dialysis time; cold ischemia time; type of donor (living vs cadaveric); number of HLA matches; or initial immunosuppression (mammalian target of rapamycin inhibitor vs other). On multivariate analysis, donor weight (odds ratio [OR]: 1.023; P = .015), use of a JJ vs ET (OR: 0.280; P = .005), and surgery time exceeding 3 hours (OR: 3.270; P < .0005) were independently associated with UC. Conclusions Catheterization of the urinary anastomosis with a JJ was associated with fewer UC. This is especially important for grafts from heavier donors. The use of an external catheter which was associated with an high rate of UC, should be avoided. |
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ISSN: | 0041-1345 1873-2623 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.transproceed.2013.02.086 |