Abstract

You have accessJournal of UrologyUrodynamics/Lower Urinary Tract Dysfunction/Female Pelvic Medicine: Female Incontinence: Therapy I1 Apr 2017MP40-05 USING DATA FROM THE CALIFORNIA OFFICE OF STATEWIDE HEALTH PLANNING AND DEVELOPMENT (OSHPD) TO DETERMINE THE 30-DAY COMPLICATION RATE FROM URETHRAL-SLING PLACEMENT. Kai Dallas and Christopher Elliott Kai DallasKai Dallas More articles by this author and Christopher ElliottChristopher Elliott More articles by this author View All Author Informationhttps://doi.org/10.1016/j.juro.2017.02.1252AboutPDF ToolsAdd to favoritesDownload CitationsTrack CitationsPermissionsReprints ShareFacebookTwitterLinked InEmail INTRODUCTION AND OBJECTIVES Surgical intervention for stress urinary incontinence is common with 200,000 repairs annually. The most common repair is mid-urethral sling placement. Although the long-term complication rate after a sling procedure has been rigorously studied, the short -term (30 day) complication rate has been incompletely assessed. We sought to evaluate unplanned hospital visits within 30 days of sling placement in the form of emergency department visits, inpatient admissions, or repeat surgery. METHODS With approval from the California Protection of Human Subjects committee, we accessed non-public data from the Office of Statewide Health Planning and Development (OSHPD) in the state of California for the years 2005-2011. All female patients who underwent an ambulatory urethral sling procedure (CPT 57288) were identified, excluding other procedures aside from cystoscopy. All emergency department visits, inpatient admissions, and sling revision operations within 30 days of the original surgery were identified. We also examined the most common primary diagnoses associated with emergency department visits. RESULTS 28,635 women were identified who underwent outpatient urethral sling placement as a sole procedure (aside from cystoscopy). 1,630 patients had at least one unplanned hospital visit (5.7%) within 30 days. This included 1,327 emergency department visits (4.7%), 295 inpatient admissions (1.0%) and 79 sling revisions (0.28%). The hospital visit rate was significantly higher in patients undergoing a third or fourth sling placement (14.3%) as compared to a first or second sling placement (5.7%) (p=0.02) (table 1). Urinary retention and Foley catheter problem were the most common emergency department visit diagnoses (18.7% of ER visits), followed by urinary tract infection (9.3% of ER visits). CONCLUSIONS One in eighteen females will have an unplanned hospital visit within 30 days of urethral sling placement, the majority of which are emergency department visits. Our findings can be used to improve patient counseling and suggest target areas to decrease unnecessary emergency department visits in the early postoperative period. © 2017FiguresReferencesRelatedDetails Volume 197Issue 4SApril 2017Page: e524-e525 Advertisement Copyright & Permissions© 2017MetricsAuthor Information Kai Dallas More articles by this author Christopher Elliott More articles by this author Expand All Advertisement Advertisement PDF downloadLoading ...

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