Penile carcinoma is considered a delayed sequel of lichen sclerosus. It is important to recognize this not so uncommon complication in time as survival of patients with Squamous Cell Carcinoma (SCC) depends on early diagnosis and treatment. We describe a case of a 49-year-old male presenting with urethral stricture due to lichen sclerosus. He was treated for stricture disease and later on developed SCC penis after ten years of presentation.
Introduction:Traditional percutaneous nephrolithotomy (PCNL) training involved subjective award of cases to the trainee. We restructured this according to the Guy's stone score (GSS) such that each trainee stepwise completed 25 cases of each grade before progressing. This study compares the outcomes of training with traditional versus stepwise approach.Methods:Four hundred consecutive cases equally distributed for two trainees in each group were compared in terms of complications (Clavien-Dindo), stone free rate (SFR), operative and fluoroscopy time. External comparison was also done against a benchmark surgeon. Multivariable regression model was created to compare SFR and complications while adjusting for comorbidity, Amplatz size, access tract location, number of punctures, body mass index, stone complexity, and training approach.Results:The distribution of cases in terms of calculus complexity was similar. Overall, in comparison to traditional training, stepwise training had significantly shorter median operative time (100 vs. 120 min, P < 0.05), fluoroscopy time (136 vs. 150 min, P < 0.05) and fewer overall (29.5% vs. 43.5%, P < 0.005) as well as major complications (3% vs. 8.5%, P - 0.029), though initial SFR was higher but not statistically significant (77% vs. 71.5%). On multivariable analyses, stepwise training was independently associated with lower complications (odds ratio 0.46 [0.20–0.74], P - 0.0013) along with GSS grade, number of punctures, and Amplatz size. Stepwise training had similar fluoroscopy time, major complications and final clearance rate compared to expert surgeon.Conclusions:PCNL has a learning curve specific for each grade of calculus complexity and stepwise training protocol improves outcomes.
Objectives To assess the reliability of the Guy's Stone Score, the Seoul National University Renal Stone Complexity (S‐ReSC) score and the S.T.O.N.E. scores in percutaneous nephrolithotomy (PCNL), and assess their utility in discriminating outcomes [stone free rate (SFR), complications, need for multiple PCNL sessions, and auxiliary procedures] valid across parameters of experience of surgeon, independence from surgical approach, and variations in institution‐specific instrumentation. Patients and methods A prospectively maintained database of two tertiary institutions was analysed (606 cases). Institutes differed in instrumentation, while the overall surgical team comprised: two trainees (experience <100 cases), two junior consultants (experience 100–200 cases), and two senior surgeons (experience >1000 cases). Scores were assigned and re‐assigned after 4 months by one trainee and an expert surgeon. Inter‐rater and test‐retest agreement were analysed by Cohen's κ and intraclass correlation coefficient. Multivariate logistic regression models were created adjusting outcomes for the institution, comorbidity, Amplatz size, access tract location, the number of punctures, the experience level of the surgeon, and individual scoring system, and receiver operating curves were analysed for comparison. Results Despite some areas of inconsistencies, individually all scores had excellent inter‐rater and test‐retest concordance. On multivariable analyses, while the experience of the surgeon and surgical approach characteristics (such as access tract location, Amplatz size, and number of punctures) remained independently associated with different outcomes in varying combinations, calculus complexity scores were found consistently to be independently associated with all outcomes. The S‐ReSC score had a superior association with SFR, the need for multiple PCNL sessions, and auxiliary procedures. Conclusion Individually all scoring systems performed well. On cross comparison, the S‐ReSC score consistently emerged to be more superiorly associated with all outcomes, signifying the importance of the distributional complexity of the calculus (which also indirectly amalgamates the influence of stone number, size, and anatomical location) in discriminating outcomes. Our study proves the utility of scoring systems in prognosticating multiple outcomes and also clarifies important aspects of their practical application including future roles such as benchmarking, audit, training, and objective assessment of surgical technique modifications.
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