Impact of Adjuvant Urinary Diversion versus Valve Ablation Alone on Progression from Chronic to End Stage Renal Disease in Posterior Urethral Valves: A Single Institution 15-Year Time-to-Event Analysis
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Elsevier Inc.
Abstract
Purpose: Long-term progression to end stage renal disease of valve ablation alone vs ablation followed by additional urinary diversion were compared among children with stage 3 chronic kidney disease due to posterior urethral valves. Materials and Methods: We performed a retrospective study of children with posterior urethral valves and stage 3 chronic kidney disease treated at a single institution between 1986 and 2011. The 3 treatment groups were classified as group 1—valve ablation alone, group 2—ablation plus subsequent vesicostomy and group 3—ablation followed by ureterostomies and/or pyelostomies. Baseline demographic characteristics were analyzed. Statistical analyses compared the incidence of time to end stage renal disease among the intervention groups using the Fisher-Freeman-Halton exact test and Kaplan-Meier analysis with the log rank test. Cox regression was used to determine predictors of end stage renal disease progression. Results: A total of 40 eligible patients were included in the study (group 1—14 patients, group 2—13 patients, group 3—13 patients). Baseline characteristics and post-intervention estimated glomerular filtration rate revealed no significant between-group differences. A statistically significant difference in progression to end stage renal disease was noted within 1 year after diagnosis of stage 3 chronic kidney disease among the treatment groups (log rank test p=0.02). However, cumulative end stage renal disease incidence at 15-year followup showed no statistical difference (log rank test p=0.628). Cox regression analysis determined that bilateral renal dysplasia (HR 2.76, 95% CI 1.21–6.30) and estimated glomerular filtration rate 60 ml/minute/1.73 m 2 or greater after intervention (HR 0.23, 95% CI 0.09–0.61) were predictive of the likelihood of progression to end stage renal disease. Conclusions: Urinary diversion following valve ablation in children with stage 3 chronic kidney disease associated with posterior urethral valves may temporarily delay progression to end stage renal disease. However, no long-term benefit was noted from diversion in the ultimate incidence of end stage renal disease, suggesting that these interventions should be seen as a temporizing measure. Bilateral renal dysplasia and post-intervention estimated glomerular filtration rate are independent variables predicting overall chronic kidney disease progression. © 2018 American Urological Association Education and Research, Inc.
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Chronic, Cystostomy, Kidney failure, Renal insufficiency, Urinary diversion, Catheter ablation, Disease progression, Female, Follow-up studies, Forecasting, Glomerular filtration rate, Humans, Infant, Infant, newborn, Kidney failure, chronic, Male, Retrospective studies, Treatment outcome, Urethra, Urodynamics, Article, Chronic kidney failure, Clinical article, Cohort analysis, Comparative study, Controlled study, End stage renal disease, Estimated glomerular filtration rate, Follow up, Human, Kidney dysplasia, Newborn, Priority journal, Retrospective study, Urethra valve, Disease exacerbation, Glomerulus filtration rate, Pathophysiology, Physiology, Procedures