Double-J Versus External Ureteral Stents in Kidney Transplantation: A Retrospective Analysis
Author(s) -
Thomas Vogel,
Markus Utech,
Fabian Schmidt,
Wiebke Holscher Keplin,
R. Diller,
Jens Brockmann,
Heiner Wolters
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
nephro-urology monthly
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.15
H-Index - 18
eISSN - 2251-7014
pISSN - 2251-7006
DOI - 10.5812/numonthly.27820
Subject(s) - medicine , stent , surgery , kidney transplantation , urinary system , anastomosis , transplantation , retrospective cohort study , kidney , urinary leakage , percutaneous , stenosis , urology
Kidney transplantation has long been recognized as the best available therapy for end stage kidney disease.This study aimed to compare outcomes of double-J versus percutaneous ureteral stent placement in renal transplantation.A retrospective analysis was performed on data of renal transplantations performed at our institution in a 12-month period. In this period, external and double-J stents were used in parallel. Length of hospital stay and stent-associated complications were evaluated.In 76 kidney transplants, 43 external (group 1) and 33 double-J (group 2) urinary stents were used. No significant difference was observed in the number of urinary tract infections, ureteric stenosis or necrosis. The mean overall length of hospital stay was comparable in both groups (20.7 days in group 1 vs 19.3 days in group 2, P = 0.533). For patients without immunological complications, the hospital stay was significantly reduced using double-J stents (12.9 days in group 1, 10.8 days in group 2, P = 0.018). Leakage of the ureteroneocystostomy occurred in 6 out of 43 patients in group 1 (13.9%). No case of anastomotic insufficiency was observed in group 2 (P = 0.035). Macrohematuria was detected in 13 out of the 43 patients in group 1 (30.2%), compared to 3 out of 33 patients in group 2 (9.1%; P = 0.045).This nonrandomized comparison of stent types in kidney transplantation supports the use of prophylactic double-J stents in terms of decreased ureteric complications and reduced length of hospital stay.
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