Abstract

ABSTRACT Purpose: The purpose was to study the correlation between age at surgery and functional recovery after infant pyeloplasty. Materials and Methods: All infants who underwent pyeloplasty were analyzed retrospectively in this multicenter study. Anteroposterior diameter (APD) >2 cm, split renal function (SRF) <40%, and Society of Fetal Urology (SFU) grade 3–4 were surgical indications. Based on the age at pyeloplasty, they were divided into Group 1 (1–3 months) and Group 2 (4–12 months). APD and SRF were compared before and after surgery in both groups. The fractional recoverable function (post-SRF-pre-SRF)/(50-pre-SRF) ×100 was correlated with age. Results: Fifty-one infants underwent pyeloplasty (mean age: 1.6 months – Group 1 and 7.2 months – Group 2). The mean APD decreased from 3 cm to 1.2 cm in Group 1 while 2.8 cm to 2 cm in Group 2 (P = 0.001). The mean SRF increased from 32.28% to 42.81% in Group 1 while 31%–34.18% in Group 2. SRF recovery was significantly higher in Group 1 compared to Group 2 (P = 0.001). Regression analysis showed a weak negative correlation (r = −0.2792) between age at surgery and renal function improvement. Conclusion: Functional recovery after pyeloplasty is better when done earlier (1–3 months), as this gives the growing kidney the best opportunity to recover.

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