The Fate of Ureteral Memokath Stent(s) in a High-Volume Referral Center: An Independent Long-Term Outcomes Review.
J Endourol
; 35(2): 180-186, 2021 02.
Article
en En
| MEDLINE
| ID: mdl-32762263
Purpose: To independently assess upper urinary tract Memokath (MMK-051) stent outcomes in a national tertiary referral center. Materials and Methods: Two researchers, completely independent to the treating team, reviewed electronic MMK-051 stent(s) patient management records. Outcomes included time to first complication, complication(s)-severity, MMK-051 stent lifespan and change incidence, salvage therapy, further surgical intervention, and mortality. Results and Limitations: One hundred patients received 162 MMK-051 stent(s) (59% with malignant and 63% with distal ureteral obstruction [UO]) with only three lost to follow-up (FU). At 5-year mean FU, only 25 patients had complication-free original MMK-051 stents (14 alive, 11 dead). Of the remaining 75 patients, 22 had other stents, 12 had major surgery (e.g., nephrectomy), 3 became dialysis dependent, and 14 stabilized without ureteral stenting after original MMK-051 removal. Malignant obstruction patients had greater original MMK-051 stent longevity (p < 0.02), but also 20 of the 21 deaths (95%). The 72% mean 5-year stent complication rate included migration (46%), blockage (34%), nonfunctioning kidney (8%), urosepsis needing intravenous antibiotics (8%), and others (6%), including one postoperative death, one ureteral injury, and two with intractable pain. Median time to first complication was 12.5 months. Conclusions: MMK-051 stents had optimal utility in managing malignant UO and in those unfit for corrective surgery. Longer independently assessed mean 5-year outcomes review revealed much higher complication rates (72%) than previously reported. Future international metallic ureteral stent guidelines should encourage clinicians to adopt patient-centered multidisciplinary assessment and selection, with counseling plus goal-setting, and harmonized long-term protocol-based reporting, for optimized future patient safety and outcomes.
Palabras clave
Texto completo:
1
Bases de datos:
MEDLINE
Asunto principal:
Uréter
/
Obstrucción Ureteral
/
Infecciones Urinarias
Tipo de estudio:
Guideline
Límite:
Humans
Idioma:
En
Revista:
J Endourol
Asunto de la revista:
UROLOGIA
Año:
2021
Tipo del documento:
Article
País de afiliación:
Reino Unido