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Clinical and Radiographic Factors Associated With Failed Renal Angioembolization: Results From the Multi-institutional Genitourinary Trauma Study (Mi-GUTS).

Authors :
Armas-Phan, Manuel
Keihani, Sorena
Agochukwu-Mmonu, Nnenaya
Cohen, Andrew J.
Rogers, Douglas M.
Wang, Sherry S.
Gross, Joel A.
Joyce, Ryan P.
Hagedorn, Judith C.
Voelzke, Bryan
Moses, Rachel A.
Sensenig, Rachel L.
Selph, J. Patrick
Gupta, Shubham
Baradaran, Nima
Erickson, Bradley A.
Schwartz, Ian
Elliott, Sean P.
Mukherjee, Kaushik
Smith, Brian P.
Source :
Urology. Feb2021, Vol. 148, p287-291. 5p.
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

<bold>Objective: </bold>To find clinical or radiographic factors that are associated with angioembolization failure after high-grade renal trauma.<bold>Material and Methods: </bold>Patients were selected from the Multi-institutional Genito-Urinary Trauma Study. Included were patients who initially received renal angioembolization after high-grade renal trauma (AAST grades III-V). This cohort was dichotomized into successful or failed angioembolization. Angioembolization was considered a failure if angioembolization was followed by repeat angiography and/or an exploratory laparotomy.<bold>Results: </bold>A total of 67 patients underwent management initially with angioembolization, with failure in 18 (27%) patients. Those with failed angioembolization had a larger proportion ofgrade IV (72% vs 53%) and grade V (22% vs 12%) renal injuries. A total of 53 patients underwent renal angioembolization and had initial radiographic data for review, with failure in 13 cases. The failed renal angioembolization group had larger perirenal hematoma sizes on the initial trauma scan.<bold>Conclusion: </bold>Angioembolization after high-grade renal trauma failed in 27% of patients. Failed angioembolization was associated with higher injury grade and a larger perirenal hematoma. Likely these characteristics are associated with high-grade renal trauma that may be less amenable to successful treatment after a single renal angioembolization. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00904295
Volume :
148
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Urology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
148471799
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.urology.2020.10.027