Litcius/Paper detail

Outcomes of Flexible Ureteroscopy vs Extracorporeal Shock Wave Lithotripsy for Renal Stones in Pediatric Patients: A European Association of Urology Urolithiasis Guidelines Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis

Robert Geraghty, Riccardo Lombardo, Cathy Yuan, Niall F. Davis, Lazaros Tzelves, Aleš Petřík, Helene Jung, Giovanni Gambaro, Thomas Tailly, Andreas Neisius, Andreas Skolarikos, Bhaskar Somani

2023The Journal of Urology20 citationsDOI

Abstract

PURPOSE: We sought to determine which treatment between flexible ureteroscopy and shock wave lithotripsy has a better stone-free rate in pediatric patients (<18 years) with renal or proximal ureteric stones (<2 cm). Subanalysis for all outcomes for randomized controlled trials only. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Using PubMed, Web of Science, and the Cochrane database, we identified studies (randomized clinical trials and prospective comparative nonrandomized studies) published until August 2022 reporting surgical outcomes of pediatrics patients undergoing flexible ureteroscopy and shock wave lithotripsy with renal or proximal ureteric stones <2 cm (PROSPERO ID: CRD42022378790). Only randomized controlled trials were considered for meta-analysis. Stone-free rate, operative time, and complications were analyzed. Analysis was performed in R. RESULTS: = 0.95). CONCLUSIONS: Flexible ureteroscopy has a significantly higher stone-free rate than shock wave lithotripsy, with no difference in complication rate or fluoroscopy exposure time, and significantly higher operative times and hospital stay. However, the current evidence base for this is weak and further randomized trials are needed.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineUreteroscopyExtracorporeal shock wave lithotripsyUrologyShock wave lithotripsyMeta-analysisPediatric urologyLithotripsyGeneral surgerySurgeryInternal medicineUreterKidney Stones and Urolithiasis TreatmentsAbdominal Surgery and ComplicationsUreteral procedures and complications