Purpose: We evaluated the success of endoscopic treatment of symptomatic vesicoureteral reflux after renal transplantation and identified factors predicting success.
Materials and methods: Endoscopy was performed for symptomatic vesicoureteral reflux after renal transplantation in 38 women and 20 men between January 2000 and December 2010. Reflux was documented by retrograde cystography and its symptomatic character was determined by at least 1 episode of acute graft pyelonephritis. The results of endoscopic treatment were evaluated clinically at 1 and 3 months, and annually, and by cystography at 3 months. Clinical success was defined as absent acute graft pyelonephritis during followup. Radiological success was defined as absent reflux on followup cystography at 3 months.
Results: Endoscopic treatment was clinically successful in 32 patients (56.1%), including 26 (65%) who received dextranomer-hyaluronic acid and 5 (33.3%) who received polydimethylsiloxane. Treatment was radiologically successful in 14 patients (26.4%) at a mean ± SD followup of 38 ± 33 months. On multivariate analysis male gender and dextranomer-hyaluronic acid were factors predictive of clinical success. Reflux grade did not predict success or failure. No high grade complication was reported.
Conclusions: Endoscopic treatment of symptomatic vesicoureteral reflux of a transplanted kidney was effective in half of the cases regardless of the bulking agent used. However, dextranomer-hyaluronic acid appeared to be more effective than polydimethylsiloxane. Due to its minimally invasive nature and low morbidity endoscopic treatment with dextranomer-hyaluronic acid could be proposed as preoperative first line treatment for symptomatic vesicoureteral reflux of a transplanted kidney regardless of reflux grade.
Keywords: baysilon; dextranomer-hyaluronic acid copolymer; endoscopy; kidney transplantation; vesico-ureteral reflux.
Copyright © 2015 American Urological Association Education and Research, Inc. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.