A Systematic Review of Ureteral Reimplantation Techniques in Endometriosis: Laparoscopic Versus Robotic-Assisted Approach
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Literature Search
2.2. Studies Eligibility
2.3. Study Selection and Data Extraction
2.4. Objectives
2.5. Statistical Analysis
3. Results
4. Discussion
4.1. Outcome Analysis of Laparoscopic and Robotic-Assisted Surgery
4.1.1. Hospital Stay and Duration of Surgery
4.1.2. Recurrence of Endometriosis-Related Ureteral Obstruction
4.1.3. Complication Comparison between Laparoscopic and Robotic-Assisted Surgery
4.2. Surgical Techniques for Ureteral Reimplantation
5. Conclusions and Limitations
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Author and Year | Study Type | N. of Patients | Mean Age (Years, Mean) | Type of Endometriosis (Intrinsic/Extrinsic) | Surgical Technique | Duration of Surgery (Min-Mean)/and Ureteral Reimplantation (Mean) | Intraoperative Complications | Reintervention for Ureteral Reimplantation Complications | Postoperative Complications (Clavien–Dindo Grading System for Surgical Complications) | Follow-Up (Months) | Recurrence Rate (%) | Time of Hospitalization (Days, Mean) SD |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Ceccaroni et al., 2018 [28] | Prospective study | 160 | 36.1 | Intrinsic/ Extrinsic | Laparoscopic Ureteroneocystostomy 160/160 (100%) Lich–Gregoir or direct reimplantation with or without psoas hitch | 364.3/92.3 (120–600/30–180) | None | 3 bladder suture leakage (1 with associated pelvic abscess, 1 hemoperitoneum) | Grade I: 6 (3.7%) Grade II: 12 (7.5%) GradeIIIb: 7 (4.4%) | >6 months | 1.2% | 8 (7–18) |
Schonman et al., 2013 [29] | Retrospective | 1 | 34.3 | Not specified | Not specified | Not specified | 2 laparotomy conversion after laparoscopic attempt | None required | None | 63 | 0% | Not specified |
Bourdel et al., 2015 [30] | Retrospective | 3 | 32 | Extrinsic | Lich–Gregoir | 226.67 (120–480) | None | None required | Grade III: 1 (33.3%) | 22.5 | 0% | 12.6 (6–26) |
Chudzinski et al., 2017 [31] | Retrospective | 3 | 28 | Not Specified | Psoas-hitch 70%, 3 vescical bipartition and 1 boari flap | 300 (174–426) | None | 1 | Grade IIIa: 1 (33.3%) | 48 | Not specified | 10.2 (4–16) |
Alves et al., 2017 [32] | Retrospective | 13 | 32.1 | Intrinsic/ Extrinsic | 18 end-to-end anastomosis and 1 ureteral reimplantation (boari flap) | 157 (90–330) | Not specified | 1 (reimplantation after failed reanastomosis) | Grade II: 1 (7.6%) Grade IIIb: 2 (15.3%) | 2 months (longer follow-up was incomplete) | 4 (19%) but includes also 8 patients who underwent ureterolysis | Not specified |
Stepniewska et al., 2010 [33] | Retrospective | 20 | 35 | Intrinsic/ Extrinsic | Lich–Gregoir or Boari flap when necessary | 313 (120–500) | Not specified | None required | Grade I: 4 (20%) Grade II: 10 (50%) Grade IIIa: 1 (5%) | 6 months | Not specified | 10 (7–17) |
Ahn et al., 2013 [34] | Retrospective | 2 | 49.5 | Not specified | Lich–Gregoir with or without psoas hitch | 137 (104–228) | Not reported | None required | None | 12 | 0% | 7 (7–7) |
Azioni et al., 2010 [35] | Retrospective | 6 | 33.6 | Intrinsic/ Extrinsic | Lich–Gregoir | 320 (250–440) | none | None required | None | none | 8.3 (7–10) | |
Mereu et al., 2010 [36] | Retrospective | 17 | 32.7 | Not specified | 17 end-to-end ureteral anastomosis | 330 (60–540) | None | 2 persistent ureteral stenosis requiring further intervention of ureteroneocystostomy | Grade II: 4 (23.5%) | 21 | 12.5% | 8 (2–31) |
Total | 8 retrospective 1 prospective studies | 225 patients | 34.8 | / | Lich–Gregoir ureteral reimplantation was the preferred technique with or without psoas-hitch | 271.1 | 2 laparotomy conversion | 7/225 (3.11%) | Grade I: 10 (4.4%) Grade II: 27 (12%) Grade IIIa/b: 12 (5.3%) | 22.56 | 2.95% | 9.1 |
Author and Year | Study Type | N. of Patients | Mean Age (Years, Mean) | Type of Endometriosis (Intrinsic/Extrinsic) | Surgical Technique | Duration of Surgery (Min)/and Ureteral Reimplantation (Mean) | Intraoperative Complications | Reintervention for Ureteral Reimplantation Complications | Postoperative Complications | Follow-Up (Months, Mean) | Recurrence Rate (%) | Hospital Stay (Days, Mean) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Chudzinski et al., 2017 [31] | Retrospective | 4 | 31 | Not Specified | Psoas-hitch 70%, 3 vescical bipartition and 1 boari flap | 321 (174–426) | None | 1 (25%) | Grade IIIb: 1 (25%) Grade II: 1 (25%) | 48 | 15% | 10.2 (4–16) |
Yang et al., 2011 [37] | Retrospective | 1 | 28 | Not specified | Distal ureterectomy with psoas hitch | Not specified | None | None | none | 24 | none | 4 (4–6) |
Hung et al., 2020 [38] | Retrospective | 4 | 36.2 | Not Specified | Terminoterminal ureteral anastomosis, ureteroneocystostomy | 299.8 (220–404) | None | None | None | 17 | none | 8.6 (7–11) |
Di Maida et al., 2020 [39] | Retrospective | 15 | 34.7 | Not specified | 13 Lich–Gregoir ureteral reimplantation with psoas hitch, 2 end-to-end anastomosis | Not specified | Not specified for the subgroup | None | Not specified for the subgroup | 31.3 | 8.7% | 4 (4–6) |
Total | 4 retrospective studies | 24 patients | 33.9 | / | 310.4 | None | 1/24 (4.1%) | Grade III: 1/9 (11.1%) Grade II: 1/9 (11.1%) | 30 | 5.9% | 6.7 |
Study | Resolution of Symptoms | Restoration of Ureteral Function | No. of Patients with Ureteral Function Improvement |
---|---|---|---|
Ceccaroni et al., 2018 [28] | Improvement or complete resolution of pain and urinary symptoms in most patients. | Achieved effective drainage of the kidney without obstruction, confirmed through follow-up imaging studies. | 160/160 (100%); resolution of hydronephrosis observed on postoperative CT scans and ultrasounds. |
Schonman et al., 2013 [29] | Significant improvement in pain and urinary symptoms. | Postoperative imaging confirmed effective ureteral function without obstruction. | 1/1 (100%); postoperative ultrasound confirmed no ureteral obstruction or hydronephrosis. |
Bourdel et al., 2015 [30] | Improvement in pain and urinary symptoms for most patients. | Effective drainage of the kidney, confirmed via imaging studies. | 3/3 (100%); improvement in hydronephrosis based on postoperative ultrasound. |
Chudzinski et al., 2017 [31] | A notable improvement in symptoms was observed. | Postoperative imaging indicated successful ureteral function | 3/4 (75%); resolution of hydronephrosis on postoperative CT scans and ultrasounds, creatinine levels were monitored in the early postoperative period. |
Alves et al., 2017 [32] | Patients reported reduced pain and better urinary function. | Imaging studies confirmed effective kidney drainage without obstruction. | 13/13 (100%); resolution of hydronephrosis confirmed by CT and ultrasound. |
Stepniewska et al., 2010 [33] | Significant reduction in symptoms for most patients. | Effective ureteral function confirmed by imaging | 19/20 (95%); postoperative CT and ultrasound indicated resolution of hydronephrosis. |
Ahn et al., 2013 [34] | Improvement in pain and urinary symptoms. | Postoperative imaging showed effective kidney drainage. | 2/2 (100%) of patients, hydronephrosis resolved based on follow-up ultrasound and CT scans. |
Azioni et al., 2010 [35] | Most patients experienced symptom relief. | Effective ureteral function as indicated by follow-up imaging. | 6/6 (100%); resolution of ureteral obstruction observed on follow-up ultrasound. |
Mereu et al., 2010 [36] | Improvement in symptoms was observed. | Postoperative imaging confirmed effective ureteral function. | 15/17 (88%); follow-up ultrasound and CT scans showed improvement in hydronephrosis |
Yang et al., 2011 [37] | Significant symptom reduction. | Imaging studies confirmed effective ureteral function. | 1/1 (100%); postoperative ultrasound and CT scans showed resolution of hydronephrosis. |
Hung et al., 2020 [38] | Patients reported improvement in pain and urinary symptoms | Effective kidney drainage was confirmed through imaging | 4/4 (100%); hydronephrosis resolved as per postoperative CT and ultrasound findings. |
Di Maida et al., 2020 [39] | Notable symptom relief was observed. | Postoperative imaging indicated successful ureteral function. | 13/15 (87%), follow-up CT and ultrasound showed restored ureteral function. |
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Di Michele, S.; Bramante, S.; Rosati, M. A Systematic Review of Ureteral Reimplantation Techniques in Endometriosis: Laparoscopic Versus Robotic-Assisted Approach. J. Clin. Med. 2024, 13, 5677. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm13195677
Di Michele S, Bramante S, Rosati M. A Systematic Review of Ureteral Reimplantation Techniques in Endometriosis: Laparoscopic Versus Robotic-Assisted Approach. Journal of Clinical Medicine. 2024; 13(19):5677. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm13195677
Chicago/Turabian StyleDi Michele, Stefano, Silvia Bramante, and Maurizio Rosati. 2024. "A Systematic Review of Ureteral Reimplantation Techniques in Endometriosis: Laparoscopic Versus Robotic-Assisted Approach" Journal of Clinical Medicine 13, no. 19: 5677. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm13195677
APA StyleDi Michele, S., Bramante, S., & Rosati, M. (2024). A Systematic Review of Ureteral Reimplantation Techniques in Endometriosis: Laparoscopic Versus Robotic-Assisted Approach. Journal of Clinical Medicine, 13(19), 5677. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm13195677