Background and Purpose: The outcomes of ureteroscopy (URS) after urgent decompression and antibiotics for patients who initially present with urosepsis because of obstructive urolithiasis have not been previously evaluated.
The aim of this study was to compare the outcomes and complications of URS in patients with a recent history of sepsis with those without sepsis.
Methods: The study included 138 patients who underwent URS for stone removal from January 2004 to September 2011 at a university medical center. A matched-pair analysis was performed using three parameters (age, sex, and race) to compare outcomes and complications between 69 patients who had sepsis vs a matched cohort who did not have sepsis before URS.
Results: The study included 138 patients, 88 (64%) females and 50 (36%) males with a median age of 57.5 years (range 18-88 years). Patients with previous sepsis had similar patient characteristics and stone-free rates (81% vs 77%) compared with patients without previous sepsis (P>0.05). Patients with previous sepsis, however, had a significantly higher complications rate (20% vs 7%), longer hospital length of stay (LOS), and longer courses of postoperative antibiotics after URS (P< 0.05). Sepsis developed postoperatively in two patients with diabetes (one with and one without previous sepsis), and postoperative fever developed in five patients with previous sepsis.
Conclusions: URS after decompression for urolithiasis-related sepsis has similar success but higher complication rates, greater LOS, and longer course of postoperative antibiotics. This is important in counseling patients who present for definitive URS after urgent decompression for urolithiasis-related sepsis.
Written by:
Youssef RF, Neisius A, Goldsmith ZG, Ghaffar M, Tsivian M, Shin RH, Cabrera F, Ferrandino MN, Scales CD, Preminger GM, Lipkin ME. Are you the author?
Division of Urology, Comprehensive Kidney Stone Center, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, North Carolina.
Reference: J Endourol. 2014 Oct 9. Epub ahead of print.
doi: 10.1089/end.2014-0343
PubMed Abstract
PMID: 25299999