Abstract

Symptomatic bladder outlet obstruction and neurogenic bladder are common conditions that frequently necessitate suprapubic insertion of a bladder tube. The purpose of this study was to describe an experience with minimally invasive imaging-guided percutaneous suprapubic bladder tube placement and the clinical and technical success and complications encountered. A total of 585 primary suprapubic bladder tube insertions and 439 exchanges of suprapubic bladder tubes were performed on 549 patients (469 men, 80 women; mean age, 66 years; range, 15-106 years). The details of percutaneous tube placement (indication, tube type, size at insertion and change, and method of insertion) were retrospectively recorded. The technical success rate for primary suprapubic bladder tube insertion was 99.6% (547/549) and for exchanges was 92.3% (405/439). The clinical success rate for primary insertion was 98.1% (572/583), and symptoms were unresolved in 1.9% (11/583). Minor complications occurred in 7.2% (42/583) of cases at tube insertion and in 4.8% (21/439) at exchange. There was one major complication (a patient needed surgery because the small bowel was traversed by a catheter), and there was no procedure-related mortality. Radiologic imaging-guided percutaneous suprapubic bladder tube placement is a safe and effective procedure.

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