Challenges in managing proximal hypospadias: A 17-year single-center experience

Space: StayCurrentMD Author: Devesh Misra, Ceri Elbourne, Anastasia Vareli, Debasish Banerjee, Ashwini Joshi, Florian Friedmacher, Clare Skerritt Published:

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Devesh Misra, Ceri Elbourne, Anastasia Vareli, Debasish Banerjee, Ashwini Joshi, Florian Friedmacher, Clare Skerritt

Topic overview

Abstract

Background

There are only a few publications in the medical literature reporting on complication rates in proximal hypospadias surgery, particularly with regard to long-term follow-up.

Methods

Over a 17.5-year period, we operated 100 patients with penoscrotal, scrotal and perineal hypospadias. Sixty-four had a single-stage repair, including 15 who received a buccal mucosa inlay "Snodgraft" repair. Thirty-six had a two-stage Bracka repair of which 19 received buccal or lower lip grafts and 17 had preputial grafts. Overall, 34 patients received buccal grafts. The median follow-up was eight years (range 1–16 years). Three patients were operated for residual chordee years later.

Results

Urethral fistulae occurred in a total of 26/100 (26.0%) cases, meatal stenosis in 16/100 (16.0%), wound breakdown in six (6.0%) and graft failure in one (1.0%). The fistula rate after the single-stage approach was 15/64 (23.4%), whereas it was 11/36 (30.6%) following two-stage repair (P = 0.4811).

Conclusions

Proximal hypospadias remains a challenging condition to treat. It is possible to perform a single-stage repair in 64.0% of cases. This brings down the median number of operations to only two. Lower lip grafts were used in 34.0% but are now used in redo-surgeries only. Our fistula rate was 26.0% but has decreased significantly in recent years.

Level of evidence

Level III.

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