Objective: The aim of this study is to report our experience with laparoscopic radical cystectomy (LRC), evaluating the technique and perioperative and pathological outcomes. Methods: 47 LRCs were performed due to muscle-invasive bladder cancer. Conduits were performed in 23 patients and neobladders in 23 (one bi-intestinal). One ureterocutaneostomy was created. Results: In 43 patients LRC was performed with minilaparotomy for urinary diversion. The mean operation time was 290 min. Four operations were converted. Complications included sigmoid colon injury, urinary leak, lymphatic leak, short-term paralytic ileus, and heart attack. Mean blood loss was 220 ml. Hospitalization time was 6 days. Tumor stage was pT2b, pT3a, pT3b, and pT4a in 28, 13, 5, and 1 patient, respectively. No positive margins were found. The mean number of lymph nodules was 17, while in the last 25 procedures it was 21. 17% of patients had tumor in the lymph nodes. The mean follow-up was 10 months. Local recurrence and dissemination was observed in 2%. Continence in patients receiving neobladder was fully satisfactory. Conclusions: More complications are related to neobladder than to ileac conduit. LRC with minilaparotomy seems to be an attractive treatment option for patients with muscle-invasive bladder cancer. Radical cystectomy performed intracorporeally could be reserved for ‘robot-assisted’ operations.
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Introduction: The development of endovision techniques and equipment miniaturization in urology make it possible to perform laparoendoscopic single-site (LESS) nephrectomy. Radical nephrectomy due to renal cancer performed with
AimThe aim of the study was to compare the number of nodes dissected during laparoscopic and open radical cystoprostatectomy in men or anterior exenteration in women due to muscle invasive bladder urothelial cancer (IBC).Material and methodsFifty-one patients treated with laparoscopic radical cystectomy (LRC) and 63 with open radical cystectomy (ORC) were compared. The LRC group consisted of 47 pT2 tumours and 4 pT3, while the ORC group was composed of 27 pT2 tumours and 36 pT3. During ORC external, internal, common iliac and obturator lymph nodes were removed separately, but were added and analysed together for each side. Nodes dissected from one side during ORC were compared to en bloc dissected nodes in the LRC group.ResultsThere were no complications associated with extended pelvic lymph node dissection during LRC or ORC. There were significant differences in the mean number of resected lymph nodes between LRC and ORC for pT2 tumours. The laparoscopic approach allowed about 8-9 more lymph nodes to be removed than open surgery in the pT2 group. In 15% of patients with pT2 disease treated with open radical cystectomy node metastases were observed. Active disease was detected in 18% of nodes resected laparoscopically due to pT2 disease. Fourty-seven percentage of patients with pT3 disease treated with open surgery were diagnosed as harbouring metastatic lymph nodes. The laparoscopic group with pT3 disease was too small to analyse.ConclusionsWe have found that laparoscopic radical cystectomy can be performed without any compromise in lymph node dissection. The technique of lymph node dissection (LND) during laparoscopic cystectomy (LRC) resulted in sufficient resected lymphatic tissue, especially in patients with bladder-confined tumours with a low volume of lymph nodes.
Pelviureteric junction (PUJ) obstruction is a condition frequently encountered in both adult and pediatric patients. Congenital abnormalities and crossing lower-pole renal vessels are the most common underlying pathologies in both men and women. This report presents a case of a young woman who was complaining of intermittent abdominal pain in whom right-sided hydronephrosis was diagnosed. The patient was scheduled for a laparoscopic right-sided Anderson-Hynes pyeloplasty. During the procedure a partly extraperitoneal appendix, with extensive adhesions to the posterior abdominal wall abutting on the ureter just below the obstructed PUJ, was identified. The patient underwent dismembered laparoscopic Anderson-Hynes pyeloplasty with concurrent appendectomy for likely dual pathologies being responsible for her symptoms.
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