Journal article
The Outcomes of Pelvic Fracture Urethral Injuries Stratified by Urethral Injury Severity: A Prospective Multi-institutional Genitourinary Trauma Study (MiGUTS)
Urology (Ridgewood, N.J.), Vol.170, pp.197-202
09/21/2022
DOI: 10.1016/j.urology.2022.09.006
PMID: 36152870
Abstract
OBJECTIVE To determine patient outcomes across a range of pelvic fracture urethral injury (PFUI) severity. PFUI is a devastating consequence of a pelvic fracture. No study has stratified PFUI outcomes based on severity of the urethral distraction injury. METHODS Adult male patients with blunt-trauma-related PFUI were followed prospectively for a minimum of six months at 27 US medical centers from 2015-2020. Patients underwent retrograde cystourethroscopy and retrograde urethrography to determine injury severity and were categorized into three groups: (1) major urethral distraction, (2) minor urethral distraction, and (3) partial urethral injury. Major distraction vs minor distraction was determined by the ability to pass a cystoscope retrograde into the bladder. Simple statistics summarized differences between groups. Multi-variable analyses determined odds ratios for obstruction and urethroplasty controlling for urethral injury type, age, and Injury Severity Score. RESULTS There were 99 patients included, 72(72%) patients had major, 13(13%) had minor, and 14(14%) had partial urethral injuries. The rate of urethral obstruction differed in patients with major (95.8%), minor (84.6%), and partial injuries (50%) (P < 0.001). Urethroplasty was performed in 90% of major, 66.7% of minor, and 35.7% of partial injuries (P < 0.001). CONCLUSION In PFUI, a spectrum of severity exists that influences outcomes. While major and minor distraction injuries are associated with a higher risk of developing urethral obstruction and need for urethroplasty, up to 50% of partial PFUI will result in obstruction, and as such need to be closely followed.
Details
- Title: Subtitle
- The Outcomes of Pelvic Fracture Urethral Injuries Stratified by Urethral Injury Severity: A Prospective Multi-institutional Genitourinary Trauma Study (MiGUTS)
- Creators
- Kiarad Fendereski - University of UtahBenjamin J McCormickSorena KeihaniJudith C HagedornBryan VoelzkeJ Patrick SelphBradley D FiglerNiels V JohnsenRodrigo Donalisio da SilvaJoshua A BroghammerShubham GuptaBrandi MillerFrank N BurksJairam R EswaraE Charles OsterbergKenneth J CarneyBrad A EricksonMatthew B GretzerPaul H ChungCatherine R HarrisGregory P MurphyPaul RusilkoKatherine T AndersonAnand ShridharaniCooper R BensonAmjad AlwaalSarah D BlaschkoBenjamin N BreyerMaxim McKibbenIan W SchwartzJay SimhanAlex J VanniRachel A MosesJeremy B Myers
- Resource Type
- Journal article
- Publication Details
- Urology (Ridgewood, N.J.), Vol.170, pp.197-202
- DOI
- 10.1016/j.urology.2022.09.006
- PMID
- 36152870
- NLM abbreviation
- Urology
- ISSN
- 0090-4295
- eISSN
- 1527-9995
- Language
- English
- Date published
- 09/21/2022
- Academic Unit
- Urology
- Record Identifier
- 9984319984402771
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