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Evaluation of practice efficiency with a novel sheathed flexible cystoscope: a randomized controlled trial

Krebs, Alfred; Borin, James F; Kim, Isaac Y; Jackson, Donna J; McDougall, Elspeth M; Clayman, Ralph V
OBJECTIVES: The processing of standard flexible cystoscopes is time-consuming and potentially hazardous to healthcare staff. We evaluated a novel flexible cystoscope system containing a disposable sheath, which obviates the need for chemical processing. METHODS: A total of 100 patients undergoing office cystoscopy were randomized into a "sheath" or a control group (n = 50 for each group). Disposable Slide-On sheaths and the CST-2000 Flexible Cystoscope System were used in the former group. A standard 16F flexible cystoscope, manually cleaned and disinfected with Cidex OPA or Rapicide, was used in the control group and the preparation times were recorded. Questionnaires to assess cystoscope setup, handling, optical quality, and patient comfort were completed by the physician, nursing staff, and patients. RESULTS: Data were available for 97 patients. The mean total time required for preparation of the cystoscopes was 10.7, 14.7, and 42.2 minutes for the sheath (n = 49), Rapicide (n = 21), and Cidex OPA (n = 27), respectively (P <0.01 for all comparisons). The control group scored better than the sheath group with regard to ease of cystoscope insertion (9.1 versus 7.7), cystoscope handling (8.8 versus 8.1), and irrigation setup (8.8 versus 8.2; all P < or = 0.01). No statistically significant difference was found between groups for procedure time, optical quality, or patient comfort, either during or after the procedure. CONCLUSIONS: The EndoSheath System can save 4 to 31 minutes of processing time while avoiding exposure to irritants found in conventional soaking methods. Although maneuvering of the sheathed cystoscope was slightly more difficult, the optical quality and patient comfort were similar to those of standard flexible cystoscopy.
PMID: 17919698
ISSN: 0090-4295
CID: 825402

Preoperative cystoscopy is beneficial in selection of patients for laparoscopic repair of intraperitoneal bladder rupture [Case Report]

Yee, David S; Kalisvaart, Jonathan F; Borin, James F
Intraperitoneal bladder rupture usually is caused by blunt external trauma to a distended bladder. Although such injuries generally necessitate a formal laparotomy, advances in minimally invasive surgery have allowed successful laparoscopic repair. We describe our preoperative evaluation and laparoscopic technique in a case of isolated intraperitoneal bladder rupture secondary to trauma.
PMID: 17949313
ISSN: 0892-7790
CID: 825382

Rapid communication: effects of Steris 1 sterilization and Cidex ortho-phthalaldehyde high-level disinfection on durability of new-generation flexible ureteroscopes

Abraham, Jose Benito A; Abdelshehid, Corollos S; Lee, Hak J; Box, Geoffrey N; Deane, Leslie A; Le, Todd; Jellison, Forrest; Borin, James F; Manipon, Anthony; McDougall, Elspeth M; Clayman, Ralph V
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: The effects of commonly used reprocessing methods on flexible ureteroscope longevity have never been examined. We prospectively studied the effects of Steris 1 sterilization and Cidex ortho-phthalaldehyde (OPA) high-level disinfection (HLD) on the image quality, physical structure, and deflective properties of two new flexible ureteroscopes. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Two identical "out-of-the-box" Storz 11278AU1 flexible ureteroscopes (Karl Storz Endoscopy, Tuttlingen, Germany) were sterilized individually using the Steris 1 system (Steris Mentor, Ohio) or disinfected with Cidex OPA (Advanced Sterilization Products, J&J, Irvine, CA) for 100 trials followed by a crossover to the other method for another 100 trials over a period of 1 year. After every five trials, optical quality, angle of deflection, and fiber damage were analyzed in the laboratory. Throughout the study, neither of these ureteroscopes was used clinically. RESULTS: After 100 trials, ureteroscope 1, which was sterilized initially in the Steris system, had a 12-mm tear on its shaft (noted after the 17th trial), 297 damaged fibers, and a 37% drop in resolution (loss of 3.75 lines/mm). There was no change in deflection from baseline. In contrast, after 100 cycles, ureteroscope 2, which was subjected to HLD with Cidex OPA, had no visible external damage, a 0% change in resolution, 10 damaged fibers, and no change in deflection. After the crossover, ureteroscope 2 developed a semilunar defect that obscured the endoscopic view, whereas there was no further significant damage to ureteroscope 1. CONCLUSION: After 100 cycles, the Steris 1 system rendered the flexible ureteroscope unusable, whereas HLD with Cidex OPA had minimal adverse impact.
PMID: 17941773
ISSN: 0892-7790
CID: 825392

Impact of urethral stump length on continence and positive surgical margins in robot-assisted laparoscopic prostatectomy

Borin, James F; Skarecky, Douglas W; Narula, Navneet; Ahlering, Thomas E
INTRODUCTION: We previously reported the benefit of meticulous apical dissection in reducing positive surgical margins (SM+) at the apex. Herein we assess whether a more aggressive urethral transection will reduce positive margins and whether reduced urethral length affects return to continence. TECHNICAL CONSIDERATIONS: All data were collected prospectively. A positive surgical margin was defined by the presence of cancer cells with ink on them. Continence, defined as no pads, was assessed with validated Expanded Prostate Cancer Instrument Composite questionnaires. Evaluation of 200 consecutive cases (group 1) revealed that 75% of surgical margins occurred at the apex. Concomitantly we assessed visual cues for urethral length, which demonstrated that even patients with very short urethral stumps requiring perineal pressure during anastomosis had equivalent times to continence as those with long, accessible stumps. We altered the point of transection, distally, to include 3 to 6 mm more of striated external urethral sphincter. The SM+ rate and time to continence for the ensuing 200 cases (group 2) were tracked. The overall SM+ and apical SM+ rates were significantly reduced (SM+ 17.6% versus 7.5%, P = 0.003; and apical SM+ 13% versus 5.5%, P = 0.01). Kaplan-Meier times to continence curves were not significantly different. CONCLUSIONS: A more aggressive apical resection resulted in marked reduction in overall SM+ rates without measurable change in time to continence or overall continence.
PMID: 17656233
ISSN: 0090-4295
CID: 825412

Percutaneous cryoablation of an upper pole renal mass: use of contralateral single lung ventilation to avoid pleural and pulmonary puncture [Case Report]

Blaschko, Sarah D; Deane, Leslie A; Borin, James F; Vajgrt, Duane; McDougall, Elspeth M; Clayman, Ralph V
A percutaneous approach to cryoablation of renal masses is not without a risk of complications. We describe a case in which selective, single lung intubation of an obese patient with an upper pole left renal mass allowed for percutaneous cryoablation with avoidance of pleural and pulmonary injury. We accomplished this by minimizing the ventilation-induced renal motion and collapsing the ipsilateral lung so that it remained out of harm's way.
PMID: 17320686
ISSN: 0090-4295
CID: 825422

Endoscopically guided percutaneous renal access: "seeing is believing"

Khan, Farhan; Borin, James F; Pearle, Margaret S; McDougall, Elspeth M; Clayman, Ralph V
Image-guided percutaneous nephrostomy tube placement can be a challenging procedure, particularly in a nondilated system or in the morbidly obese patient. Herein, we report the routine use of ureteroscopy-guided percutaneous renal access. With this method, rapid, accurate creation and dilation of the nephrostomy tract is assured in all patients regardless of body habitus or stone burden.
PMID: 16859452
ISSN: 0892-7790
CID: 825432

Initial experience with full-length metal stent to relieve malignant ureteral obstruction [Case Report]

Borin, James F; Melamud, Ori; Clayman, Ralph V
Ureteral obstruction caused by extrinsic compression by a malignancy generally can be overcome initially with a ureteral stent. However, the long-term failure rate is high, usually necessitating placement of a nephrostomy tube. Herein, we present the initial case, in this country, of intractable ureteral obstruction managed successfully with the newly developed all-metal Resonance stent (Cook Ireland Ltd., Limerick, Ireland) constructed of MP35N alloy, a composite of nonmagnetic nickel-cobalt-chromium-molybdenum. The patient is a 64-year-old woman with metastatic breast cancer causing retroperitoneal fibrosis and ureteral obstruction diagnosed laparoscopically. The obstruction failed to respond to placement of a single 7F double-J stent and then of two 6F double-J stents in the left ureter. As a last resort, in order to avoid nephrostomy-tube placement, the 6F metal stent was placed; this provided unobstructed flow of urine, as documented on a subsequent Whitaker test and, most recently, on a renal scan, 4 months after initial stent placement.
PMID: 16724898
ISSN: 0892-7790
CID: 825442

Construct validity testing of a laparoscopic surgical simulator

McDougall, Elspeth M; Corica, Federico A; Boker, John R; Sala, Leandro G; Stoliar, Gabriela; Borin, James F; Chu, Frank T; Clayman, Ralph V
BACKGROUND: We present initial data on the construct, content, and face validity of the LAPMentor (Simbionix), virtual reality laparoscopic surgical simulator. STUDY DESIGN: Medical students (MS), residents and fellows (R/F), and experienced laparoscopic surgeons (ES), with < 30 laparoscopic cases per year (ES<30) and those with > 30 laparoscopic cases per year (ES>30), were tested on 9 basic skill tasks (SK) including manipulation of 0-degree and 30-degree cameras (SK1, SK2), eye-hand coordination (SK3), clipping (SK4), grasping and clipping (SK5), two-handed maneuvers (SK6), cutting (SK7), fulguration (SK8), and object-translocation (SK9). RESULTS: Mean MS (n=23), R/F (n=24), ES<30 (n=26), and ES>30 (n=30) ages were 26 years (range 21 to 32 years), 31 years (range 27 to 39 years), 49 years (range 31 to 70 years) and 47 years (range 34 to 69 years), respectively. In the lower level skill tasks (SK3, SK4, SK5, and SK6) the ES>30, ES<30, and R/F had similar scores, but were all substantially better than the MS scores. In the higher level skill tasks (SK7, SK8, and SK9), the ES>30 scores tended to be better than the R/F and ES<30, which were similar, and these, in turn, were markedly better than the MS. The ES>30 had notably higher SK8 scores than the R/F and ES<30, who had similar scores, and these had notably better scores than the MS. CONCLUSIONS: The noncamera skills (SK3 to 9) of the LAPMentor surgical simulator can distinguish between laparoscopically naive and ES. SK8 showed the highest level of construct validity, by accurately differentiating among the MS, R/F, ES<30 and ES>30.
PMID: 16648018
ISSN: 1072-7515
CID: 825452

Comparison of resolution, contrast, and color differentiation among fiberoptic and digital flexible cystoscopes

Borin, James F; Abdelshehid, Corollos S; Clayman, Ralph V
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Advances in electro-optics continue to improve the urologist's ability to perform minimally invasive procedures. While the development of flexible fiberoptic cystoscopes more than 20 years ago greatly impacted the practice of urology, distal-sensor digital technology may represent the next step in the evolution of endoscopy. We compared a new distal-sensor digital flexible cystoscope with two standard fiberoptic flexible cystoscopes. MATERIALS AND METHODS: We evaluated the resolution, contrast, and color discrimination of a new ACMIICN distal-sensor digital cystoscope with >165,000 effective pixels in its clear aperture (viewing area), a new ACMI-ACN II fiberoptic cystoscope with <15,000 pixels in its clear aperture, and a Storz 1127 office fiberoptic cystoscope. Five subjects compared each cystoscope across 13 test parameters. RESULTS: There was no difference in the performance of the two fiberoptic cystoscopes. The ICN cystoscope was statistically superior to one or both fiberoptic cystoscopes across 12 of the 13 tests, including color differentiation between shades of dark red (P < 0.05), contrast discrimination along a 15-step grayscale gradient (P < 0.001 compared with the 1127 fiberoptic cystoscope only), resolution at 10 mm (7.52 line pairs/mm [lp/mm] (ICN) nu 3.58 lp/mm for both fiberoptic cystoscopes; (P < 0.001), and clear resolution of a 1-mm target at a distance of 6.1 cm (ICN) nu 3.3 cm (1127) and 3.8 cm (ACN II) (P < 0.001). CONCLUSIONS: The ICM distal-sensor all-digital cystoscope was clearly superior to two representative fiberoptic cystoscopes in vitro in terms of resolution, contrast discrimination, and red color differentiation. In-vivo performance remains to be assessed.
PMID: 16426134
ISSN: 0892-7790
CID: 825462

Tubeless percutaneous nephrolithotomy using hemostatic gelatin matrix

Borin, James F; Sala, Leandro G; Eichel, Louis; McDougall, Elspeth M; Clayman, Ralph V
We describe using hemostatic gelatin matrix (FloSeal; Baxter Inc., Irvine, CA) to provide hemostasis of the tract after percutaneous nephrolithotomy, thereby obviating a nephrostomy tube. For patients who are rendered stone free, a 7F, 11.5-mm occlusion balloon catheter, passed retrograde, is used to occlude the collecting system at the level of entry of the 30F Amplatz sheath. FloSeal is then injected through the partially retracted Amplatz sheath while withdrawing the applicator and the sheath in tandem. The guidewire is withdrawn per urethra until its tip resides in the renal pelvis. A 36-cm, 7F tail stent is passed retrograde, and the skin is closed with cyanoacrylate adhesive (Ethicon, Somerville, NJ). A Foley catheter is placed, to be removed the next morning; the patient can be discharged on postoperative day 1. The ureteral stent is removed in 5 to 7 days as an outpatient procedure.
PMID: 16053347
ISSN: 0892-7790
CID: 825472