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Functional Outcome and Complications following Ileal Neobladder Reconstruction in Male Patients without Tumor Recurrence. More than 35 Years of Experience from a Single Center

Richard E. Hautmann, Björn Volkmer, G Egghart, D. Frohneberg, Hans‐Werner Gottfried, Jürgen E. Gschwend, R. Hefty, K. Kleinschmidt, R. Küfer, Kurt Miller, R. de Petriconi, J. Simon, U. K. Wenderoth

2020The Journal of Urology31 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

PURPOSE: There is a lack of data on true long-term functional outcome of orthotopic bladder substitution. The primary study objective was to report our 35-year clinical experience. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Since October 1985, 259 male patients from a large single center radical cystectomy series with complete followup of more than 60 months (median 121, range 60-267) without recurrence, irradiation or undiversion that might have affected the functional outcome, were included. RESULTS: Median age at radical cystectomy and at survey was 63 (range 23-81) and 75 (range 43-92) years, respectively. Overall 87% of patients voided spontaneously and residual-free. This rate decreased with increasing age at the time of surgery (less than 50 years old 94%, 70 years old or older 82%). Overall day/nighttime continence rates were 90%/82%. These rates decreased with increasing age at the time of surgery from 100%/88% to 87%/80%. The overall pad-free rate was 71%/47%. Bicarbonate use decreased from 51% (5 years) to 19% (25 years). Patients with a followup of more than 20 years had the lowest rate of residual urine and clean intermittent catheterization (0.0%) as well as use of more than 1 pad at daytime/nighttime (6.3%/12.5%) and mucus obstruction (0.0%). Serum creatinine showed only the age related increase. The surgical complication rate was 27% and correlated inversely with functional results (chi-squared 11.227, p <0.005), even when the younger age at the time of surgery (younger than 60 years) was related to higher rates of surgical complications (chi-squared 6.80, p <0.05). CONCLUSIONS: The ileal neobladder represents an excellent long-term option for urinary diversion with an acceptable complication rate.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineSingle CenterSurgeryOutcome (game theory)Center (category theory)General surgeryCrystallographyMathematical economicsChemistryMathematicsBladder and Urothelial Cancer TreatmentsUrological Disorders and TreatmentsUrinary and Genital Oncology Studies
Functional Outcome and Complications following Ileal Neobladder Reconstruction in Male Patients without Tumor Recurrence. More than 35 Years of Experience from a Single Center | Litcius