1 / 12

Percutaneous Nephrolithotomy

Percutaneous Nephrolithotomy. Jim Armitage, Stuart Irving and Neil Burgess on behalf of the BAUS Section of Endourology Annual Meeting 1 st September 2011. Demographics. 9 th January 2010 - 21 st July 2011 (18 months) 52 consultants from 41 centres 926 cases 484 male ; 432 female

oded
Download Presentation

Percutaneous Nephrolithotomy

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Percutaneous Nephrolithotomy Jim Armitage, Stuart Irving and Neil Burgess on behalf of the BAUS Section of Endourology Annual Meeting 1st September 2011

  2. Demographics 9th January 2010 - 21st July 2011 (18 months) 52 consultants from 41 centres 926 cases 484 male ; 432 female Median number of cases per consultant 11 (Range 1-76)

  3. Operative details • Stone size • 0-1cm - 7% 1-2cm - 26% >2cm - 47% • Complete staghorn - 9% Partial staghorn - 10% • Multiple stones - 54% • Side • 512 Left ; 371 Right • 95% Prone ; 5% Supine

  4. Operative details • Renal Access • Urologist - 40% Radiologist - 60% • Subcostal - 92% Supracostal - 8% • Fluoroscopy - 71% • Ultrasound - 3% • Both - 26% • CT - 0.1% • Number of Tracts • 1 - 93% 2 - 6% 3 - 0.7%

  5. Operative details • Pre-op MSU • 91% • Fragmentation • Ultrasound - 41% • Lithoclast - 31% • Lift out - 21% • Laser - 7% • Flexible renoscopy • 48%

  6. Operative details • Complete stone clearance • Fluoroscopy - 81% • Day 1 post-op imaging - 69% • Staghorn calculi • Fluoroscopy - 58% • Day 1 post-op imaging - 44%

  7. Operative details • Drainage • Nephrostomy only - 53% • Ureteric stent only - 8% • Nephrostomy + Stent - 15% • Ureteric catheter only - 1% • Nephrostomy + Ureteric catheter - 8% • Totally tubeless - 15% • Median post-operative stay • 3 days (Range 1-72)

  8. Morbidity • Procedure abandoned • 4% • Failed access, n=6 • Inaccessible stones, n=7 • Bleeding, n=5 • Other, n=4 • Visceral injury • 0.5% • Pleural injury, n=3 • Colon injury, n=1

  9. Morbidity • Transfusion • 2.4% • Infection • Fever - 17% • SIRS/sepsis - 2% • HDU admission • 3.4% (approximately two-thirds planned)

  10. Mortality • 10 deaths (1.1%) • Cancer (non-urological), n=4 • Cancer (urological), n=1 • Non-cancer, n=4 • Unknown, n=1

  11. Personal feedback • Number of cases • Stone characteristics • Procedures abandoned • Transfusion rate • Sepsis rate • Visceral injury • Length of stay • Stone free rate - fluoroscopy

  12. Conclusions • The first prospectively maintained PCNL registry with online data entry • Facilitates personal audit against national standards • Data quality is good • 78% of records had complete data on stone size, visceral injury, transfusion, sepsis and stone clearance rates • Recording of areas such as grading of stone complexity, classification of complications and post-operative imaging could be improved

More Related