Pilot study comparing the two hemostatic agents in patients undergoing partial nephrectomy

被引:6
作者
Palacios D.A. [1 ]
McDonald M. [2 ]
Miyake M. [1 ]
Rosser C.J. [1 ,3 ]
机构
[1] Section of Urologic Oncology, MD Anderson Cancer Center Orlando, Orlando
[2] Department of Urology, Celebration Hospital - Florida Hospital, Celebration
[3] Cancer Research Institute, Orlando Health, Orlando, FL 32527
关键词
Haemostatic agent; Nephrectomy; Nephron-sparing; Partial; Renal mass;
D O I
10.1186/1756-0500-6-399
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Background: Recently studies have demonstrated improved outcomes in patients undergoing nephron-sparing surgery (NSS) for low stage renal tumors, thus NSS is widely accepted as the treatment option for these patients. With NSS, there is a risk of renal hemorrhage and thus haemostatic agents may be routinely applied to the cut surface of the kidney. Herein we compare two commercially available haemostatic agents applied intra-operatively to the cut surface of the kidney. Post-operative outcomes (oncologic and non-oncologic) are reported. Methods. The medical records of 23 patients with suspicious renal mass documented on axial imaging and who underwent open NSS via a mini-subcostal incision were extensively reviewed. One of two haemostatic agents (Floseal®, n = 11; Arista®, n = 12) was intra-operatively applied to the cut surface of the kidney. Chi-square and T- student test was used to compare outcomes between the cohort of 11 patients who had Floseal® and the 12 patients who had Arista®. Results: Median pre-operative size of renal mass was 4.3 cm (range 1.5-7.0 cm). Final pathology revealed 3 oncocytomas and 20 renal cell carcinoma (17 clear cell, 1 chromophobe and 2 papillary), pT1a = 14 and pT1b = 6. Mean intra-operative blood loss and hospital stay between the Floseal® vs. Arista® cohorts did not significantly differ (227 mL vs. 250 mL, p = 0.68 and 4.4 days vs. 4.5 days, p = 0.76, respectively). Intra-operative and post-operative complications were not different between the two cohorts. No recurrences have been documented with a mean follow-up of 18 months. Conclusion: Along with meticulous surgical technique, the use of either haemostatic agent (Floseal® or Arista®) was not associated with high rate of intra-operative or post-operative haemorrhage. Thus either haemostatic agent may be successfully used during NSS. © 2013 Palacios et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.
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