Urethral strictures can significantly impact the quality of life for patients because it can be associated with significant complications such as fistulas, bladder calculi, infections and sepsis. Additionally, it might even lead to renal failure. The worldwide prevalence of urethral strictures is high, with an estimated rate of 229-627 patients per 100,000 population. In this literature review, the aim was to discuss the types and etiology of urethral strictures and the recurrence rates following the different management modalities. Studies that were included in this review were published between January 2005 until May 2021. The results support the current evidence that the idiopathic and iatrogenic bulbar strictures are the most common types while penile strictures, the iatrogenic and inflammatory are the most common causes. Recurrence rates are reported after management with almost all of the current management modalities, indicating the need for better interventions to enhance the outcomes and alleviate the quality of care. The recurrence rate of strictures after treatment with internal urethrotomy and direct vision internal urethrotomy by three years is 65%. Other studies reported that the rate of recurrence was estimated to be around 14 after 6 months from internal urethrotomy and up to 27% after 12 months. The rate of complications and recurrence following treatment with anastomotic urethroplasty was estimated to be less than 5%. Detailed information and discussion were provided in the study manuscript.
Recurrent male anterior urethral stricture disease is a complex surgical challenge that should be managed by reconstructive urologists with experience in stricture management. Diagnosis of recurrence requires both anatomic narrowing and patient symptoms identified on validated questionnaires, with limited role for intervention in asymptomatic treatment "failures". Endoscopic management has a very specific role in recurrence, and the choice of technique for urethroplasty depends on pre-operative urethrography and cystoscopy. Surgical success depends on addressing patient concerns, complete stricture excision, tissue quality optimization, and the use of multi-stage repair when indicated. Augmentation with genital skin flaps and/or grafts is often required, with buccal mucosa as the ideal graft source if local tissue is compromised. Salvage options including urinary diversion and perineal urethrostomy must also be considered in debilitated patients with severe disease or repeated treatment failures. Unique patient populations including patients with hypospadias and lichen sclerosis are among the highest risk for repeated recurrence and require special care in surgical technique, graft selection, and post-operative management.
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