Impact of surgeon’s experience on outcome parameters following ureterorenoscopic stone removal

Within the BUSTER trial, we analyzed the surgeon’s amount of experience and other parameters associated with URS procedures regarding the stone-free rate, complication rate, and operative time. Patient characteristics and surgical details on 307 URS procedures were prospectively documented according...

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Veröffentlicht in:Urolithiasis 2019-10, Vol.47 (5), p.473-479
Hauptverfasser: Wolff, I., Lebentrau, S., Miernik, A., Ecke, T., Gilfrich, C., Hoschke, B., Schostak, M., May, M.
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container_end_page 479
container_issue 5
container_start_page 473
container_title Urolithiasis
container_volume 47
creator Wolff, I.
Lebentrau, S.
Miernik, A.
Ecke, T.
Gilfrich, C.
Hoschke, B.
Schostak, M.
May, M.
description Within the BUSTER trial, we analyzed the surgeon’s amount of experience and other parameters associated with URS procedures regarding the stone-free rate, complication rate, and operative time. Patient characteristics and surgical details on 307 URS procedures were prospectively documented according to a standardized study protocol at 14 German centers 01–04/2015. Surgeon’s experience was correlated to clinical characteristics, and its impact on the stone-free rate, complication rate, and operative time subjected to multivariate analysis. 76 (25%), 66 (21%) and 165 (54%) of 307 URS procedures were carried out by residents, young specialists, and experienced specialists (> 5 years after board certification), respectively. Median stone size was 6 mm, median operative time 35 min. A ureteral stent was placed at the end of 82% of procedures. Stone-free rate and stone-free rate including minimal residual stone fragments (adequate for spontaneous clearance) following URS were 69 and 91%, respectively. No complications were documented during the hospital stays of 89% of patients (Clavien–Dindo grade 0). According to multivariate analysis, experienced specialists achieved a 2.2-fold higher stone-free rate compared to residents ( p  = 0.038), but used post-URS stenting 2.6-fold more frequently ( p  = 0.023). Surgeon’s experience had no significant impact on the complication rate. We observed no differences in this study’s main endpoints, namely the stone-free and complication rates, between residents and young specialists, but experienced specialists’ stone-free rate was significantly higher. During this cross-sectional study, 75% of URS procedures were performed by specialists. The experienced specialists’ more than two-fold higher stone-free rate compared to residents’ justifies ongoing efforts to establish structured URS training programs.
doi_str_mv 10.1007/s00240-018-1073-7
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source MEDLINE; SpringerLink Journals
subjects Adult
Aged
Clinical Competence
Correlation of Data
Cross-Sectional Studies
Female
Humans
Kidney Calculi - surgery
Male
Medical Biochemistry
Medicine
Medicine & Public Health
Middle Aged
Nephrology
Original Paper
Patients
Skills
Surgeons
Surgery
Treatment Outcome
Ureteral Calculi - surgery
Ureteroscopy
Urology
title Impact of surgeon’s experience on outcome parameters following ureterorenoscopic stone removal
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