Abstract

To describe the technique of robotic remnant vaginectomy/excision of urethral diverticulum in transmen and report postoperative outcomes. Between 2015 and 2018, 4 patients underwent robotic remnant vaginectomy/excision of urethral diverticulum for relief of urinary symptoms. Patients were of mean age 36 ± 10.1 years (range 26-50) at time of vaginal remnant excision, and were 26 ± 9.1 months (range 20-39) post-op following their primary vaginectomy and radial forearm free flap (n=3) or anterolateral thigh (n=1) phalloplasty. All had multiple urologic complications after primary phalloplasty, most commonly urinary retention (n=4), urethral stricture (n=3), fistula (n=3), dribbling (n=2), and obstruction (n=2). Indication for revision was obstruction and retention (n =3 ) and/or dribbling (n=2). In each case, the robotic transabdominal dissection freed remnant vaginal tissue from the adjacent bladder and rectum without injury to these structures. Concurrent first- or second-stage urethroplasty was performed in all cases at a more distal portion of the urethra using buccal mucosa, vaginal, or skin grafts. Intraoperative cystoscopy was used in each case to confirm complete resection and closure of the diverticulum. At mean follow-up of 294 ± 125.6 days (range 106-412), no patients had persistence or recurrence of vaginal cavity/urethral diverticulum on cystoscopic follow-up. Of 3 patients who wished to ultimately stand to void, 2 were able to do so at follow-up. Robotic transabdominal approach to remnant vaginectomy/excision of urethral diverticulum allows for excision without opening the perineal closure for management of symptomatic remnant/diverticulum in transgender men after vaginectomy.

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