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Bladder Stones in Renal Transplant Patients: Presentation, Management, and Follow-up.

Authors :
Sandberg, Maxwell
Cohen, Adam
Escott, Megan
Temple, Davis
Marie-Costa, Claudia
Rodriguez, Rainer
Gordon, Alex
Rong, Anita
Andres-Robusto, Brian
Roebuck, Emily H.
Whitman, Wyatt
Webb, Christopher J.
Stratta, Robert J.
Assimos, Dean
Wood, Kyle
Mirzazadeh, Maajid
Source :
Urologia Internationalis. Apr2024, p1-7. 7p. 2 Charts.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

<bold><italic>Introduction:</italic></bold> The study aim was to analyze the presentation, management, and follow-up of renal transplant patients developing bladder calculi. <bold><italic>Methods:</italic></bold> Patients who underwent renal transplant with postoperative follow-up at our institution were retrospectively analyzed (1984–2023) to assess for the development of posttransplant bladder stones. All bladder stones were identified by computerized tomography imaging and stone size was measured using this imaging modality. <bold><italic>Results:</italic></bold> The prevalence of bladder calculi post-renal transplantation during the study window was 0.22% (<italic>N</italic> = 20/8,835) with a median time to bladder stone diagnosis of 13 years posttransplant. Of all bladder stone patients, 6 (30%) received deceased donor and 14 (70%) living donor transplants. There were 11 patients with known bladder stone composition available; the most common being calcium oxalate (<italic>N</italic> = 6). Eleven (55%) patients had clinical signs or symptoms (most commonly microhematuria). Fourteen of the bladder stone cohort patients (70%) underwent treatment including cystolitholapaxy in 12 subjects. Of these 14 patients, 9 (64%) were found to have nonabsorbable suture used for their ureteroneocystostomy closure. <bold><italic>Conclusions:</italic></bold> The prevalence of bladder stones post-renal transplant is low. The utilization of nonabsorbable suture for ureteral implantation was the main risk factor identified in our series. This technique is no longer used at our institution. Other factors contributing to bladder stone formation in this population warrant identification. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00421138
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Urologia Internationalis
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
177960106
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1159/000539091