학술논문

Current Management of Extraperitoneal Bladder Injuries: Results from the Multi-Institutional Genito-Urinary Trauma Study (MiGUTS).
Document Type
article
Source
Investigative Urology. 204(3)
Subject
Physical Injury - Accidents and Adverse Effects
Urologic Diseases
Patient Safety
Clinical Research
6.4 Surgery
Evaluation of treatments and therapeutic interventions
Injuries and accidents
Renal and urogenital
Adult
Drainage
Female
Humans
Male
Middle Aged
Multiple Trauma
Pelvic Bones
Prospective Studies
United States
Urinary Bladder
Wounds
Nonpenetrating
Wounds
Penetrating
epidemiology
urinary bladder
wounds and injuries
trauma centers
multicenter study
Language
Abstract
PurposeWe studied the current management trends for extraperitoneal bladder injuries and evaluated the use of operative repair versus catheter drainage, and the associated complications with each approach.Materials and methodsWe prospectively collected data on bladder trauma from 20 level 1 trauma centers across the United States from 2013 to 2018. We excluded patients with intraperitoneal bladder injury and those who died within 24 hours of hospital arrival. We separated patients with extraperitoneal bladder injuries into 2 groups (catheter drainage vs operative repair) based on their initial management within the first 4 days and compared the rates of bladder injury related complications among them. Regression analyses were used to identify potential predictors of complications.ResultsFrom 323 bladder injuries we included 157 patients with extraperitoneal bladder injuries. Concomitant injuries occurred in 139 (88%) patients with pelvic fracture seen in 79%. Sixty-seven patients (43%) initially underwent operative repair for their extraperitoneal bladder injuries. The 3 most common reasons for operative repair were severity of injury or bladder neck injury (40%), injury found during laparotomy (39%) and concern for pelvic hardware contamination (28%). Significant complications were identified in 23% and 19% of the catheter drainage and operative repair groups, respectively (p=0.55). The only statistically significant predictor for complications was bladder neck or urethral injury (RR 2.69, 95% 1.21-5.97, p=0.01).ConclusionsIn this large multi-institutional cohort, 43% of patients underwent surgical repair for initial management of extraperitoneal bladder injuries. We found no significant difference in complications between the initial management strategies of catheter drainage and operative repair. The most significant predictor for complications was concomitant urethral or bladder neck injury.