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Neonatal circumcisions and parental refusal of intramuscular vitamin K: A review of the literature and current guidelines

Mendelson, Jordan L; Jacobs, Anna; Vega, Diego Alvarez; Brenseke, William; Glasser, Chana; Fine, Ronnie G; Friedman, Steven C; Horowitz, Mark; Gitlin, Jordan S
INTRODUCTION/BACKGROUND:Parental refusal of intramuscular (IM) vitamin K in newborns poses challenges, particularly for pediatric urologists assessing the safety of neonatal circumcision. Vitamin K deficiency bleeding (VKDB) is a known risk, with lack of prophylaxis increasing bleeding complications. This study evaluates the safety of neonatal circumcision without IM vitamin K, reviews guidelines, and explores alternative prophylaxis options. OBJECTIVE:To assess if neonatal circumcision can be safely performed on infants lacking IM vitamin K and to identify both optimal timing and alternative prophylactic approaches. METHODS:We conducted a literature review using PubMed and Google Scholar to gather data on neonatal circumcision and VKDB in the context of IM vitamin K refusal. Additionally, we searched for relevant guidelines from the American Urological Association (AUA), American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP), and other organizations. Our study included analysis of ten recent cases of neonatal circumcision without IM vitamin K, focusing on safety outcomes and timing. RESULTS:IM vitamin K is the most effective prophylaxis against VKDB, significantly reducing bleeding risk up to sixfold in neonatal circumcision. Oral vitamin K, sometimes used as an alternative in Europe, shows variable effectiveness and lacks standardization in the U.S. Newborn prothrombin (PT) levels fluctuate significantly in the first week: PT levels are high at birth, drop within 24 h, reach a nadir at 24-72 h, then rebound. Circumcisions performed at 14 days on ten patients without IM vitamin K showed no bleeding complications, suggesting that timing circumcisions after PT stabilization may be safer. CONCLUSIONS:IM vitamin K prophylaxis should remain standard care. In cases of refusal, alternative prophylaxis and timing circumcision after the PT nadir may improve safety. This study underscores the need for updated guidelines from professional organizations, including the AUA, to address the growing trend of IM vitamin K refusal and its implications for neonatal circumcision.
PMID: 39743430
ISSN: 1873-4898
CID: 5805552

Could abdominal pain and hematuria indicate a more complex urological issue?

Álvarez Vega, Diego R; El Kashory, Ahmed; Gitlin, Jordan S; Hanna, Moneer K
PMID: 39395455
ISSN: 1527-9995
CID: 5706452

Size matters: Total testicular volume predicts sperm count in Tanner V varicocele patients

Fang, Alexander H; Franco, Israel; Pizzuti, Joseph M; Boroda, Joseph U; Friedman, Steven C; Fine, Ronnie G; Horowitz, Mark; Schlussel, Richard N; Landau-Dyer, Lori; Zelkovic, Paul F; Freyle, Jaime; Sommer, Jessica E; Gitlin, Jordan S
INTRODUCTION/BACKGROUND:It is known the prevalence of varicoceles in adolescent men is 14-29% but there is debate surrounding implications on fertility. As obtaining a semen analysis (SA) may be challenging, there is need for objective tests as measures of fecundity. Our aim was to investigate the relationship between testicular volume differential (TVD), varicocele grade, and total testicular volume (TTV) on seminal parameters including total motile sperm count (TMSC). MATERIALS AND METHODS/METHODS:We conducted a retrospective single-center chart review over 14 years of 486 Tanner V adolescent males. Three hundred and four met inclusion of palpable, non-operated left-sided varicocele who underwent at least one SA and ultrasound. Abnormal TMSC was defined by World Health Organization 2010 criteria for minimal reference ranges. Multivariate logistic regression, receiver operating characteristic analysis with Youden J-statistic and descriptive statistics were performed. RESULTS:Three hundred and four Tanner V adolescents with median age of 18.0 years (18.0-19.0), median TTV of 34.5 cc (28.9, 40.2) and median TMSC of 62.5 million/ejaculate (25.4, 123.4) were evaluated. TTV cutoff of 29.5 cc was found to predict TMSC of <9 million/ejaculate with negative predictive value of 96.2% and odds ratio of 6.08 ([2.13-17.42], p < 0.001). TVD greater than 20% did not reach statistical significance with an odds ratio of 1.66 ([0.41-6.62], p = 0.50). DISCUSSION/CONCLUSIONS:In clinical practice, each patient will need to have an individualized plan. Based on our data, for older adolescents (17 or 18 years) with varicocele and an abnormal TTV, clinicians may have a lower threshold for advising SA, and if unable to obtain, surgical intervention and/or closer surveillance should be stressed. Patients should be informed of their six-fold increase in abnormal SA. Patients with normal TTV should be advised they are at lower risk of having abnormal SA. Younger patients with varicocele and an initial TVD>20%, should be followed closely but intervention delayed until 17 or 18 to better assess TTV. The importance of trending patient data should be emphasized as a single measurement has low predictive value for developing adolescents. Limitations of our study include a retrospective design and the lack of uniform correlation between adolescent SA and paternity. CONCLUSIONS:Total testicular volume less than 29.5 cc increased odds of abnormal semen analysis by over six times and had a negative predictive value of 96.2%. Ultrasound results may be useful for risk stratification and counselling on appropriateness of surgical intervention.
PMID: 38876892
ISSN: 1873-4898
CID: 5669582

Erectile Dysfunction in Adolescents and Young Adults

Pantazis, Amelia; Franco, Israel; Gitlin, Jordan
PURPOSE OF REVIEW/OBJECTIVE:The goal of this paper is to provide a summary of the recent research, evaluation, work-up, and treatment recommendations regarding erectile dysfunction in adolescents and young adults to better equip pediatric urologists to manage patients with this condition. RECENT FINDINGS/RESULTS:The latest research regarding erectile dysfunction in this population includes organic and psychogenic etiologies, correlations between the COVID-19 pandemic, and online pornography consumption. In our large pediatric urology practice, we found an 31x increase of adolescent males presenting with erectile dysfunction since 2014. The majority of cases are attributed to a psychogenic etiology such as anxiety or depression. It is likely that with stress from anxiety and depression, cortisol levels rise, increasing vascular resistance and leading erectile dysfunction in this population. Most patients want to be reassured of normal testosterone levels, offered cognitive behavioral therapy, and be rehabilitated with tadalafil starting at 5 mg p.o. daily until tapered.
PMID: 38922362
ISSN: 1534-6285
CID: 5730302

Adult-Type Granulosa Cell Tumor of the Testis in a 16-Year-Old: A Case Report and Review of the Literature [Case Report]

Mendelson, Jordan; Babajanian, Maytal; Brenseke, William; Bhandari, Sujita; Gitlin, Jordan
Adult-type Granulosa cell tumor of the testis is a rare subtype of sex cord-stromal tumors, with fewer than 100 cases reported. The typical clinical presentation is an asymptomatic, painless testicular mass. We report a case of a 16-year-old male with adult-type testicular Granulosa cell tumor who presented with a palpable, painless right testicular mass, and subsequently underwent right inguinal radical orchiectomy. This report contributes to the growing body of literature regarding this rare diagnosis, furthering our understanding of clinical, imaging, and histological findings of its presentation.
PMID: 38897318
ISSN: 1527-9995
CID: 5672172

Management of the refractory nocturnal enuresis patient to desmopressin in a pediatric population: Desmopressin + oxybutynin vs. desmopressin + imipramine

Shain, Spencer; Gitlin, Jordan; Pantazis, Amelia; Fine, Ronnie; Horowitz, Mark; Friedman, Steven; Zelkovic, Paul; Dyer, Lori; Schlussel, Richard; Freyle, Jamie; Fang, Alexander; Sommer, Jessica; Franco, Israel
INTRODUCTION AND OBJECTIVE/OBJECTIVE:Desmopressin is well accepted as first-line medical therapy for enuresis. If ineffective, combination therapy of desmopressin + oxybutynin or desmopressin + imipramine has been used. This study assessed the efficacy of adjunct therapy with either imipramine or oxybutynin in the management of enuresis patients who failed desmopressin treatment. STUDY DESIGN/METHODS:A retrospective chart review of our database for patients with enuresis was performed. Patients who were prescribed desmopressin, oxybutynin, and imipramine over 14 years for enuresis were included. Two cohorts of patients were examined; group OXY was treated with desmopressin and oxybutynin, and group IMP received desmopressin and imipramine. Pretreatment measurement of Vancouver Symptom Scores (VSS) were used to compare groups using the VSS question "I wet my bed at night" where 4: every night, 3: 4-5 nights per week, 2: 1-2 nights per week, 1: 3-4 nights per month, and 0: never. International Children's Continence Society (ICCS) criteria for continence success was utilized to determine outcomes. RESULTS:2521 patients prescribed one of the 3 medications were identified. Among them, 81 patients (mean age: 10.5 ± 2.8 years) received combination therapy. Of which, 55 were male and 26 female. Specifically, 58 were prescribed both desmopressin and imipramine (group IMP), 23 desmopressin and oxybutynin (group OXY), and 4 transitioned from OXY to IMP. Mean pretreatment VSS showed no difference between groups. Both groups experienced minimal drops in wet nights with desmopressin alone. A comparison revealed that group IMP reduced wet nights significantly more than group OXY (VSS wet night score 0.7 ± 1.2 vs. 2.3 ± 1.1 respectively, p < 0.0001). Non-intent-to-treat complete response rate was 68% vs 5% (OR = 42.5, p < 0.001) (IMP vs. OXY respectively). Intent-to-treat response rates were 58%. DISCUSSION/CONCLUSIONS:Although first-line desmopressin treatment for enuresis is effective, it does not work for all patients, and many parents and children desire nighttime dryness. Clinicians have combined desmopressin with oxybutynin or imipramine for improved results, but research comparing these modalities is scarce. Our study suggests that the desmopressin and imipramine combination is superior at reducing nights wet compared to desmopressin and oxybutynin, attributed to imipramine's probable central mechanism rather than its secondary anticholinergic properties. Limitations include a modest sample size, retrospective design, and subjective responses to the Vancouver questionnaire. CONCLUSION/CONCLUSIONS:A combination of desmopressin and imipramine was more effective in reducing wet nights and had a complete response rate that was 42.5 times greater than desmopressin and oxybutynin.
PMID: 38871547
ISSN: 1873-4898
CID: 5669402

A comparison of 467 uroflowmetry results in repaired hypospadias vs. normal male flows

Boroda, Joseph; Gitlin, Jordan; Fang, Alexander; Zelkovic, Paul; Reda, Edward; Friedman, Steven; Fine, Ronnie; Horowitz, Mark; Schlussel, Richard; Landau-Dyer, Lori; Freyle, Jaime; Franco, Israel
INTRODUCTION/BACKGROUND:There are currently no clinical criteria for obstructed urinary flow after hypospadias repair surgery. Previous studies have utilized adult and pediatric nomograms and flow shapes to define obstruction, however these methods are limited by a lack of standardization and lack of interrater reliability when determining flow shapes, respectively. The idealized voider derived flow indexes offer a way to track uroflowmetry results in a volume and age agnostic manner. OBJECTIVE:We sought to evaluate all our hypospadias patients over a 10-year period and identify patients without complications and those with complications and determine their respective flow parameters. Our secondary objective is to identify which uroflowmetry parameters are the most significant predictors of urethral stricture and meatal stenosis at the time of the uroflowmetry study. STUDY DESIGN/METHODS:Retrospective chart review was used to compile demographic information, details of hypospadias repair surgeries, and uroflowmetry results from pediatric hypospadias repair patients. Subjects were divided into distal, midshaft, and proximal groups based on the initial location of their urethral meatus. Flows from the hypospadias repair groups were compared to flows from normal age matched controls from a previous study. We compared flows from hypospadias repair patients with no complications present with those who had urethral stricture or meatal stenosis present at the time of uroflowmetry. Binary logistic regression and ROC analysis was used to assess different uroflowmetry parameters' ability to detect the presence of obstructed urine flow. RESULTS:467 uroflowmetry studies from 200 hypospadias repair patients were included in the database. Compared to controls, the hypospadias repair groups tended to have significantly lower Qmax, Qavg, Qmax FI, Qavg FI, and longer ttQmax. Significant differences in flow parameters were observed when comparing hypospadias repair patients with and without flow obstructing complications at the time of uroflowmetry. Binary logistic regression including various uroflowmetry parameters showed Qmax FI had a significant effect on the odds of observing the absence of a stricture in proximal and distal hypospadias cases. DISCUSSION/CONCLUSIONS:Of the uroflowmetry parameters analyzed, binary logistic regression and the likelihood ratio of a positive result all point to Qmax FI as the better parameter to use to detect the presence of complications in patients who have undergone distal or proximal hypospadias repair surgery. CONCLUSION/CONCLUSIONS:We have established normal parameters for post-operative hypospadias repair patients which can be used to follow patients over time and allow for the identification of complications by keeping track of flow indexes which are volume and age agnostic.
PMID: 38772843
ISSN: 1873-4898
CID: 5654462

In-utero Diagnosis of Prostatic Embryonal Rhabdomyosarcoma [Case Report]

Schiller, Emily; Joshi, Parth; El-Ali, Alexander; Brenseke, William; Magid, Margret S; Wexler, Leonard; Gitlin, Jordan
Though rhabdomyosarcoma is the most common soft-tissue tumor diagnosed in children there are no reported cases of prenatally detected prostatic embryonal rhabdomyosarcoma. This report demonstrates the first reported case of this phenomenon and its subsequent workup, diagnosis, and treatment.
PMID: 37696305
ISSN: 1527-9995
CID: 5593792

Congenital Anterior Urethral Diverticulum in Identical Twins [Case Report]

Wei, Nancy; Elkun, Yuval; Ambinder, David; Gitlin, Jordan; Dyer, Lori
Congenital anterior urethral diverticulum (CAUD) is an uncommon abnormality of the male urethra. In the literature, cases of CAUD affecting both children within a set of identical twins or presenting concomitantly with another urethral condition are exceedingly rare. We describe 2 cases of CAUD in identical twins: a pair of newborns in which Twin 1A and Twin 1B both present with CAUD, and a second pair of newborns in which only Twin 2A presents with CAUD along with a partial collateral urethral duplication. In doing so, we aim to add to the incomplete literature on the embryological development of CAUD.
PMID: 36244471
ISSN: 1527-9995
CID: 5360022

Pediatric Bladder Tumors: A Ten-Year Retrospective Analysis

Shumaker, Andrew D; Harel, Miriam; Gitlin, Jordan; Friedman, Steven C; Dyer, Lori; Freyle, Jaime; Zelkovic, Paul F; Horowitz, Mark; Fine, Ronnie G; Schlussel, Richard N
OBJECTIVE:To present our experience in a single pediatric urology practice over a 10-year period with bladder tumors in the pediatric population in an effort to add to the relatively small amount of existing data. We hope to expand the community's knowledge of presentations, management and natural history of pediatric bladder tumors. METHODS:We retrospectively queried our electronic medical records for International Classification of Diseases, Tenth Revision (ICD-10) and Current Procedural Terminology (CPT) codes relevant for bladder tumors. Patients with underlying bladder pathology, such as neurogenic bladder, history of bladder exstrophy, and history of bladder augmentation, were excluded. RESULTS:We identified 30 patients with bladder tumors from 2011 to 2021. There were 21 males and 9 females. Age at diagnosis ranged from 16 months to 19 years. Tumors identified were: 11 of various inflammatory subtypes; 4 papillomas; 4 rhabdomyosarcomas; 3 papillary urothelial neoplasms of low malignant potential and 8 of other types. Treatment included transurethral resection of bladder tumor, chemoradiation and laparoscopic partial cystectomy. Twenty nine patients had disease limited to the bladder and 1 had disease outside the bladder. Follow-up ranged from 2 weeks to 13 years (median 19 months). All patients had no evidence of disease at most recent follow-up. CONCLUSION:Pediatric bladder tumors range from aggressive rhabdomyosarcomas to more benign urothelial lesions. Fortunately, the latter type of tumor is the more prevalent lesion. Knowledge of the treatment options and natural history of these tumors will hopefully be of benefit to clinicians and parents alike.
PMID: 35970356
ISSN: 1527-9995
CID: 5674432