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1.
World J Urol ; 41(10): 2767-2774, 2023 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37642679

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: To present our initial experience with periurethral adjustable continence therapy (ACT™) for urinary incontinence due to intrinsic sphincter deficiency (ISD) in children. METHODS: This is an approved prospective non-randomized pilot study (NCT03351634) aiming to treat children born with spinal dysraphism (SD) or exstrophy epispadias complex (EEC) with ACT™. Endpoints were patient-reported changes in daily pad count, 24-h Pad test and complications. RESULTS: Since April 2018, 13 children (six girls, seven boys) were implanted at the median age of 12 years (5-16). The etiology of incontinence was neurogenic ISD (7/13, 54%) and EEC (6/13, 46%). After ACT™ implantation, continence (no pad or 1 security pad/day) was achieved in 9(69%) patients (5/7 SD, 4/6 EEC). Additionally, two (15%) patients had a significant improvement (decreasing Pad test from 1049 to 310 g at 3 months). One patient (7%) had no improvement. Results were stable at 21 months (6-43) of follow-up. Mean final balloon volume was 2.89 ml (± 0.85) with a median of 3 fillings to obtain continence. We had four revisions due to cutaneous port erosion (n = 3) and balloon migration (n = 1) and two definitive explantations. PinQ score was significantly improved (47 vs 40.5 with balloon, p = ns). Neither degradation of the upper urinary tract nor cystomanometric changes have been observed at 6 and 12 months postoperatively. CONCLUSION: Urinary incontinence due to ISD owing to EEC or SD can be successfully treated with ACT™ periurethral balloons. Given the minimal invasiveness of this therapy, it might be a first-line option treatment in children with complex stress urinary incontinence.


Subject(s)
Urethral Diseases , Urinary Incontinence, Stress , Urinary Incontinence , Male , Female , Humans , Child , Child, Preschool , Adolescent , Pilot Projects , Prospective Studies , Urinary Incontinence/etiology , Urinary Incontinence/therapy , Urinary Incontinence, Stress/surgery , Prostheses and Implants , Treatment Outcome
2.
J Pediatr Urol ; 19(3): 248.e1-248.e6, 2023 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36746718

ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION: To compare the efficacy, side effects, and cost-effectiveness between a single-use digital flexible ureteroscope and a reusable flexible ureteroscope in the treatment of paediatric renal stones. METHODS: This analytic, case-control, monocentric study included all patients undergoing flexible ureterosopies for stone treatment. Between April 2016 and February 2019, a reusable (Flex-XC®, Karl Storz) flexible ureteroscope was used (control group), whereas a single-use (Uscope®, PUSEN Medical©) flexible ureteroscope was used in all procedures from March 2019 to April 2021. Clinical and procedural outcomes, operative times, complication rates, hospital stay, and costs per procedure were evaluated. RESULTS: Forty-three cases using a reusable flexible ureteroscope and thirty-nine using a single-use flexible ureteroscope were included in the study. Demographic patient characteristics, stone burden, location and composition, preoperative presence of a double-J stent, procedural outcomes, mean length of postoperative hospital stay, and complications (4.6% versus 5%, p = 0.81) were comparable between the two groups. Median operative duration for stone removal was 93 min (20-170) with reusable versus 81 min (55-107) with the single-use scope (p = 0.18). Scope failure occurred four times with the reusable scope and in no case with the single-use. The total cost per procedure associated with the use of single-use scopes (798 Euros) was lower than a reusable scope (1483.23 Euros). DISCUSSION: Single-use flexible ureteroscopes were created to bypass the problems incurred when reusable scopes were damaged and therefore not available for use in surgical procedures. Single-use flexible ureteroscopes are always immediately available and ready to be used, even in urgent cases, as they typically do not require maintenance or sterilization. Compared with their reusable counterparts, single-use flexible ureteroscopes have similar digital performance (270°), image quality and we found no difference in the success and complication rates. Cost analysis of a reusable flexible ureteroscope must consider the purchase price, maintenance and repair costs, and decontamination costs (including handling, detergent, bacterial culture, transportation, and storage costs). In contrast, only purchase price is included in cost analysis for single-use flexible ureteroscopes. Our study suggests that single-use flexible ureteroscopes may be associated with lower costs per procedure than their reusable counterparts. CONCLUSION: Single-use flexible ureteroscopes are an interesting alternative to their reusable counterparts, particularly in terms of material resource management. Cost analyses conducted using a low volume of cases representative of a paediatric urology division favour the use of single-use ureteroscopes.


Subject(s)
Kidney Calculi , Urolithiasis , Humans , Child , Ureteroscopes , Ureteroscopy/methods , Equipment Design , Kidney Calculi/surgery
3.
J Imaging ; 8(6)2022 May 25.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35735950

ABSTRACT

(1) Background: Segmentation of the bladder inner's wall and outer boundaries on Magnetic Resonance Images (MRI) is a crucial step for the diagnosis and the characterization of the bladder state and function. This paper proposes an optimized system for the segmentation and the classification of the bladder wall. (2) Methods: For each image of our data set, the region of interest corresponding to the bladder wall was extracted using LevelSet contour-based segmentation. Several features were computed from the extracted wall on T2 MRI images. After an automatic selection of the sub-vector containing most discriminant features, two supervised learning algorithms were tested using a bio-inspired optimization algorithm. (3) Results: The proposed system based on the improved LevelSet algorithm proved its efficiency in bladder wall segmentation. Experiments also showed that Support Vector Machine (SVM) classifier, optimized by Gray Wolf Optimizer (GWO) and using Radial Basis Function (RBF) kernel outperforms the Random Forest classification algorithm with a set of selected features. (4) Conclusions: A computer-aided optimized system based on segmentation and characterization, of bladder wall on MRI images for classification purposes is proposed. It can significantly be helpful for radiologists as a part of spina bifida study.

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