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Journal Of Pediatric Urology[JOURNAL]

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A retrospective population-based cohort study to assess outcomes, time to complications and cost of follow-up care following pediatric pyeloplasty in Ontario, Canada (2002-2016).

Bar Yaakov N, McClure A, Lam M … +3 more , Welk B, Wang P, Dave S

J Pediatr Urol · 2026 May · PMID 42350227 · Publisher ↗

PURPOSE: Pediatric dismembered pyeloplasty (PP) is the gold standard surgery for uretero-pelvic junction obstruction (UPJO) in children. However, there is no consensus regarding the duration and methods of providing foll... PURPOSE: Pediatric dismembered pyeloplasty (PP) is the gold standard surgery for uretero-pelvic junction obstruction (UPJO) in children. However, there is no consensus regarding the duration and methods of providing follow-up care after PP. This study aims to assess the rate of redo-interventions following PP and to define the ideal follow-up care following PP. MATERIALS AND METHODS: This is a retrospective population-based cohort study including all PP patients in Ontario between April 2002 and March 2016 using routinely collected data, with a minimum 5-year follow-up. Baseline variables included demographics, surgical approach, laterality and surgeon experience. The primary outcome was time to secondary surgical intervention, including redo PP. Secondary outcomes included costs of follow-up care and rates of early ER visits. Regression analyses were preformed to predict need for secondary intervention 2-years post PP, including independent variables: age, sex, surgical approach and early complication. RESULTS: The study included 1049 patients with a median age of 2 (IQR 0-7) years. Of the 13.6% of patients who had at least one secondary intervention following PP (including 3.8% who underwent a redo PP), 90.2% occurred within 3-years of PP. The median cost/patient of follow up care was $1472 CAD (IQR $292-$31,133). Regression analysis did not reveal any predictors of delayed secondary intervention. CONCLUSIONS: This study demonstrates that over 86% of PP are completed successfully, with a 3.8% rate of redo-PP. The majority of secondary interventions for post-PP complications occur within 3 years post-PP. Variability in duration and cost of follow-up care post- PP should be addressed to minimize costs, and a minimum 3-years follow-up after PP is recommended.

Maternal prior pregnancy outcome subtype and offspring cryptorchidism: A retrospective case-control study.

Zhao J, Jin Y, Shi Z … +4 more , Cheng X, Cen K, Zhong H, Zhu J

J Pediatr Urol · 2026 Jun · PMID 42349063 · Publisher ↗

OBJECTIVE: To determine whether maternal prior pregnancy outcome subtype and frequency are associated with cryptorchidism in male offspring, and whether first-trimester exogenous progesterone exposure mediates any observ... OBJECTIVE: To determine whether maternal prior pregnancy outcome subtype and frequency are associated with cryptorchidism in male offspring, and whether first-trimester exogenous progesterone exposure mediates any observed association. MATERIALS AND METHODS: We conducted a hospital-based retrospective case-control study of 1220 mother-son pairs (610 cryptorchidism cases; 610 controls). Maternal prior pregnancy outcome subtype was defined using a prespecified proximal-event approach based on the most recent qualifying pregnancy event before the index pregnancy: no prior pregnancy loss or termination, miscarriage, or pregnancy termination. Subtype-specific frequency was categorized as 0, 1, or ≥2. Adjusted odds ratios (aORs) were estimated using multivariable logistic regression; robustness was examined using 1:1 propensity score matching with conditional logistic regression. Exploratory mediation analysis estimated indirect effects through first-trimester exogenous progesterone exposure. RESULTS: In fully adjusted models, miscarriage was associated with higher odds of cryptorchidism compared with no prior pregnancy loss or termination (aOR 1.97; 95% CI 1.26-3.09), whereas pregnancy termination was not (aOR 1.14; 95% CI 0.86-1.52). In joint subtype-frequency analyses, odds increased with the number of miscarriages (one: aOR 1.74; 95% CI 1.07-2.83; two or more: aOR 3.77; 95% CI 1.22-11.66) and were higher for two or more pregnancy terminations (aOR 1.77; 95% CI 1.10-2.84). Matched analyses were directionally consistent. Mediation analyses suggested a modest indirect effect through first-trimester progesterone exposure for the miscarriage association. CONCLUSIONS: Maternal prior miscarriage was associated with cryptorchidism in male offspring, whereas pregnancy termination showed higher odds only among women with two or more prior procedures. First-trimester exogenous progesterone exposure may account for a modest proportion of the miscarriage-cryptorchidism association.

Associations of clinical and laboratory parameters with pediatric urolithiasis composition: A retrospective, single-center study.

Yuan C, Lan Y, Tang X … +6 more , Tang Y, Wang C, Zeng L, Ma X, Huang L, Huang Y

J Pediatr Urol · 2026 Jun · PMID 42335679 · Publisher ↗

OBJECTIVE: To investigate demographic, clinical, and laboratory factors associated with distinct stone compositions in children. METHODS: This retrospective study included 237 children aged <14 years who underwent stone... OBJECTIVE: To investigate demographic, clinical, and laboratory factors associated with distinct stone compositions in children. METHODS: This retrospective study included 237 children aged <14 years who underwent stone composition analysis between July 2008 and November 2023. Demographic, clinical, and laboratory data were collected, and propensity score matching (PSM) was used to control for confounding factors. RESULTS: The urate component (uric acid anhydrous, ammonium acid urate, and sodium urate) was most prevalent in infants, males, and non-Han children, whereas the calcium oxalate component predominated in older children. Analysis of coexisting components revealed urate is the most common partner to calcium oxalate (67.6%), and vice versa (82.8%). Struvite most frequently coexisted with carbonate apatite (60%), while carbonate apatite most often coexisted with calcium oxalate (54%). After PSM, the urate component was independently associated with host metabolic dysregulation, including lower high-density lipoprotein (β = -0.175, 95% CI: -0.279 to -0.071, p = 0.001) and with coagulation dysfunction, as evidenced by a prolonged prothrombin time (β = 0.595, 95% CI: 0.125 to 1.064, p = 0.014). Additionally, preoperative urinary tract infection (UTI) and congenital urinary tract anomalies were independently associated with both carbonate apatite and struvite components, with directionally consistent but quantitatively unstable signals in the struvite cohort, whereas the calcium oxalate component exhibited an inverse association with UTI (OR = 0.156, 95% CI: 0.030 to 0.819, p = 0.028). Furthermore, the carbonate apatite component was also independently associated with an elevated systemic immune-inflammation index (β = 416.53, 95% CI: 60.05 to 773.01, p = 0.024) and systemic inflammation response index (β = 1.286, 95% CI: 0.086 to 2.487, p = 0.038). CONCLUSION: Urate component was prevalent in infants, males, and non-Han children, whereas calcium oxalate predominated in older children. After adjusting for confounders, urate composition was associated with metabolic abnormalities, the carbonate apatite component was linked to infection and anatomical malformations, and a similar directional pattern was observed in the struvite cohort.

Ginkgo biloba versus desmopressin in treatment of children with monosymptomatic nocturnal enuresis: A randomized controlled trial.

El-Shazly M, Alorabi A, Alahmar IE … +3 more , Gomaa I, Aziz M, Zeinelabden KM

J Pediatr Urol · 2026 Jun · PMID 42321081 · Publisher ↗

OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the efficacy and safety of Ginkgo biloba extract (GBE) compared with Desmopressin and their combination in children with monosymptomatic nocturnal enuresis (MNE). METHODS: In this double-blind, ran... OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the efficacy and safety of Ginkgo biloba extract (GBE) compared with Desmopressin and their combination in children with monosymptomatic nocturnal enuresis (MNE). METHODS: In this double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled trial, 398 children aged 5-14 years with MNE were assigned to four groups: placebo, GBE (60 mg daily), Desmopressin (0.2 mg daily), or GBE plus Desmopressin for 3 months. Primary outcomes included the number of wet nights per week. Secondary outcomes assessed sleep quality using the Sleep Disturbance Scale for Children (SDSC), arousal by the Disorders of Arousal (DA) score, and quality-of-life using the Pediatric Incontinence Questionnaire (PinQ). RESULTS: After 3 months, the combination group demonstrated the greatest improvement in wet nights (median 0 [IQR 0-2]) compared to GBE (6 [0.5-6.5]) and Desmopressin (2 [0-6]) (p < 0.001). Full response rates (≥90% reduction in wet nights) were highest with combination therapy (88.3%), followed by Desmopressin (46.5%), GBE (24.8%), and placebo (9.5%) (p < 0.001). GBE-containing groups showed significantly increased DA and SDSC scores, indicating enhanced arousal and lighter sleep. Quality-of-life (PinQ) score decreased in all treatment groups denoting improvement, with the best outcomes observed in the combination arm. Adverse effects were mild and comparable across groups, and serum sodium levels remained stable. CONCLUSION: GBE is a safe and effective novel therapy for MNE, improving sleep arousal and symptom control. Its combination with Desmopressin offers superior efficacy, better quality of life, and lower relapse rates than either agent alone.

Missed outpatient appointments: Who's missing out and Why?

Harwood EA, Lassman D, James E … +3 more , Ndebanje B, Griffin E, Wang LC

J Pediatr Urol · 2026 Jun · PMID 42315440 · Publisher ↗

INTRODUCTION: Missed outpatient appointments ("no-shows") negatively affect healthcare access, efficiency, and patient outcomes and may be particularly impactful in pediatric subspecialty care. Pediatric urology services... INTRODUCTION: Missed outpatient appointments ("no-shows") negatively affect healthcare access, efficiency, and patient outcomes and may be particularly impactful in pediatric subspecialty care. Pediatric urology services are often centralized, requiring families to travel long distances and coordinate care around caregiver availability and competing responsibilities. Limited data directly compare predictors of missed appointments between pediatric and adult urology populations or incorporate patient- and caregiver-reported reasons for nonattendance. MATERIALS AND METHODS: We conducted an Institutional Review Board-approved retrospective review of all outpatient urology appointments scheduled at a single center between January and December 2024. This practice serves as the sole provider of pediatric urology care for a predominantly rural state. Demographic, socioeconomic, and visit-level variables were extracted from the electronic health record. Multivariable logistic regression was used to identify predictors of no-show visits in the full cohort and in pediatric and adult subgroups. Additionally, telephone interviews were conducted with pediatric caregivers and adult patients who missed appointments between March and September 2024 to assess patient- and family-reported barriers to attendance. RESULTS: A total of 10,106 visits were analyzed, including 2031 pediatric visits. Pediatric patients had a higher no-show rate than adults (7% vs. 4%) and were significantly more likely to miss appointments overall (odds ratio [OR] 1.67, p < 0.001). Across all patients, governmental insurance, lack of insurance, non-English language preference, non-white race, and new patient visits were associated with increased odds of no-show. In pediatric-specific analyses, male gender, lower Childhood Opportunity Index, and follow-up visit status were significant predictors of nonattendance. Among 72 interview respondents, the most commonly reported reasons for missed visits were forgetting the appointment, transportation barriers, and competing family or childcare obligations, with caregivers of pediatric patients significantly more likely to cite family-related barriers. CONCLUSIONS: Pediatric urology patients experience higher no-show rates than adults, driven by socioeconomic disadvantage, geographic barriers, and family-level responsibilities. Interventions addressing communication, transportation challenges, and structural access barriers may improve appointment adherence and access to pediatric urology care, particularly in rural settings.

Ruling out pediatric bacterial epididymo-orchitis with urinalysis - The case for minimizing unnecessary antibiotic prescription.

Getzler I, Cohen M, Fremder A … +1 more , Halachmi S

J Pediatr Urol · 2026 Jun · PMID 42314368 · Publisher ↗

INTRODUCTION: Epididymo-orchitis in pediatric patients is predominantly non-bacterial, often stemming from viral or reactive etiologies. Despite guidelines recommending conservative management for non-bacterial cases, an... INTRODUCTION: Epididymo-orchitis in pediatric patients is predominantly non-bacterial, often stemming from viral or reactive etiologies. Despite guidelines recommending conservative management for non-bacterial cases, antibiotic overtreatment remains prevalent in the outpatient setting. We evaluated the diagnostic accuracy of urinalysis in ruling out bacterial infection to support antibiotic stewardship in this population. METHODS: We conducted a cross-sectional diagnostic accuracy study using electronic health records from a large health maintenance organization in Israel. The cohort included patients younger than 18 years with a diagnosis of epididymo-orchitis or clinically overlapping entities (acute scrotum, appendage torsion) who had paired urinalysis and urine culture results within one week of diagnosis. Logistic regression and ROC curve analysis were performed to assess the ability of urinalysis parameters to predict positive urine cultures. RESULTS: Of 682 eligible cases, confirmed bacterial infection was rare, occurring in only 17 patients (2.5%). Nitrite positivity was the strongest independent predictor of infection (OR 43.98; p < 0.001). A prediction model incorporating all urinalysis parameters yielded an area under the curve (AUC) of 0.825 and achieved a 97.7% classification accuracy for correctly predicting negative cultures. Despite the low prevalence of infection, antibiotics were prescribed in 237 cases (34.7%). Urinary anatomic abnormalities were significantly associated with culture positivity. CONCLUSIONS: Bacterial coinfection in pediatric epididymo-orchitis is uncommon. Urinalysis serves as a highly accurate screening tool to rule out bacterial etiology. A negative urinalysis supports withholding antibiotics in this setting, reserving treatment for children with positive markers or known anatomic abnormalities. This evidence-based approach This evidence-based approach has the potential to reduce unnecessary antibiotic exposure, however prospective studies are needed to validate these findings before broad implementation.

Animal-assisted therapy in pediatric urodynamics.

Gazdik J, Gazdik A, Kirby VL … +1 more , Howe AS

J Pediatr Urol · 2026 Jun · PMID 42314367 · Publisher ↗

INTRODUCTION/BACKGROUND: Urodynamics (UDS) is associated with high levels of patient anxiety/discomfort. Children are often unable to complete UDS, with anesthesia needed to place catheters. Animal-assisted therapy (AAT)... INTRODUCTION/BACKGROUND: Urodynamics (UDS) is associated with high levels of patient anxiety/discomfort. Children are often unable to complete UDS, with anesthesia needed to place catheters. Animal-assisted therapy (AAT) has been used in a variety of settings, but it has not been studied for UDS before. OBJECTIVE: To determine if AAT can increase success of completing UDS testing without anesthesia in children who were previously unable to perform UDS, along with decreasing distress levels. STUDY DESIGN: We performed a pilot case series of 7 patients (2 female, 5 male) aged 4-16 (mean 9.7) years who previously were unable to complete UDS awake, with AAT prior to and during the UDS procedure. A visual analog scale (VAS) was used to measure patient stress levels before and after AAT. RESULTS: We were able to successfully complete UDS testing with AAT in 6 of the 7 patients (85.7%) without the need for anesthesia. VAS scores decreased from before to after AAT (5.4-3.6, p = 0.020) but with discrepancy when compared to UDS success. DISCUSSION: Our study was the first to describe AAT during UDS. Our preliminary data found AAT to be feasible in UDS. Subjective distress may not correlate with procedural success. AAT in UDS may be more beneficial in certain populations, such as anxious children who previously were unable to tolerate UDS, and not in others such as severe neurodevelopmental conditions. Our study was limited by the small sample size, a single provider, single center, single therapy dog, inclusion of a specific population of patients, and no control group due to this being a pilot study. CONCLUSION: AAT for certain children undergoing UDS testing could help improve the ability to complete the testing without anesthesia. Further studies are needed to fully demonstrate its usefulness in UDS.

How I do it: 3-Suture robotic pyeloplasty: Step-by-step technique.

Morlacco A, Carletti F, Tonet E … +5 more , Bruniera M, Grossele M, Betto G, Rigamonti W, Moro FD

J Pediatr Urol · 2026 Jun · PMID 42308692 · Publisher ↗

Robot-assisted pyeloplasty is now a gold standard in the treatment of pediatric ureteropelvic junction obstruction. We describe a standardized "3-suture" technique designed to facilitate the pyelo-ureteral anastomosis. W... Robot-assisted pyeloplasty is now a gold standard in the treatment of pediatric ureteropelvic junction obstruction. We describe a standardized "3-suture" technique designed to facilitate the pyelo-ureteral anastomosis. We used this technique in 65 paediatric patients aged 3-17 years. Early major complications (Clavien-Dindo grade III) occurred in 3 patients (4.6%). The median operative time was 150 min. Surgical success was achieved in 96% of cases at a median follow-up of 9.5 months. This 3-suture approach offers a highly reproducible method for robotic pyeloplasty, facilitating accurate anatomical reconstruction with excellent surgical outcomes.

The tunica vaginalis flap as a rescue procedure in testicular torsion: Quantifying salvage rates with matched cohorts.

Ahmad I, Khondker A, Rickard M … +5 more , Dos Santos J, Romao R, Pippi Salle JL, Lorenzo AJ, Chua ME

J Pediatr Urol · 2026 May · PMID 42308691 · Publisher ↗

INTRODUCTION: Testicular torsion is the most common urological emergency in children, and the role of tunica albuginea fasciotomy with tunica vaginalis flap (TVF) in its treatment is controversial. The objective of this... INTRODUCTION: Testicular torsion is the most common urological emergency in children, and the role of tunica albuginea fasciotomy with tunica vaginalis flap (TVF) in its treatment is controversial. The objective of this study was to evaluate the outcomes among patients undergoing TVF, standard orchiopexy (SO), and orchiectomy, with attention to symptom duration. METHODS: We performed a retrospective review of boys aged 1 month-18 years who underwent surgery for testicular torsion at a single centre from 2010 to 2024. Clinical, ultrasonographic, and operative variables were abstracted, and testicular salvage was defined as a follow-up volume ≥50% of the contralateral testis with blood flow. Propensity score matching for age, symptom duration, and parenchymal heterogeneity generated TVF-SO and TVF-orchiectomy cohorts. Salvage was further stratified by duration of symptoms (<6, 6-12, 12-24, >24 h). RESULTS: Among 157 patients, 31 (20%) underwent orchiectomy, 39 (25%) TVF, and 87 (55%) SO. Overall salvage was 54%, differing by procedure (SO 82%, TVF 36%, orchiectomy 0%; p < 0.001). In the TVF-SO matched cohort (n = 64), salvage was 38% for TVF and 59% for SO (p = 0.133). In the TVF-orchiectomy matched cohort (n = 38), salvage was 32% in the TVF group and 0% in the orchiectomy group (p = 0.02). Salvage after TVF declined steeply with ischemia time, with higher rates observed within 6 h of presentation. DISCUSSION: These findings suggest that TVF is used predominantly in high-risk torsion with adverse ultrasound features. When viewed descriptively, the TVF cohort showed lower follow-up viability than the SO cohort, but this difference must be interpreted in the context of the different intraoperative and preoperative risk profiles underlying procedure selection. We highlight TVF as a valuable additional consideration compared to outright orchiectomy. CONCLUSION: In this retrospective cohort, TVF was used in clinically severe torsion and was associated with follow-up viability in a subset of cases. These descriptive findings support further prospective study but should not be interpreted as evidence of equivalence or comparative benefit of TVF.

Robotic major reconstruction in pediatric urology: A scoping review of catheterizable channels and bladder augmentation.

Xiang A, Wesemann L, Eftekharzadeh S … +5 more , To T, Pyrzanowski J, Desanto K, Harris KT, Rove KO

J Pediatr Urol · 2026 May · PMID 42302588 · Publisher ↗

BACKGROUND: Robotic assistance has expanded the scope of minimally invasive major reconstruction in pediatric urology, but adoption varies and comparative advantages over open surgery remain uncertain. OBJECTIVES: ELIGIB... BACKGROUND: Robotic assistance has expanded the scope of minimally invasive major reconstruction in pediatric urology, but adoption varies and comparative advantages over open surgery remain uncertain. OBJECTIVES: ELIGIBILITY CRITERIA: English-language clinical studies reporting primary data on patients <18 years old undergoing the targeted robotic procedures for neurogenic bladder or severe voiding dysfunction. Oncologic indications, editorials, nonclinical studies, and abstracts without full text were excluded. SOURCES OF EVIDENCE: MEDLINE (Ovid), Embase (Embase.com), Cochrane Library (Wiley: CDSR and CENTRAL), and Web of Science Core Collection (Clarivate). CHARTING METHODS: A standardized extraction form (with calibration) captured bibliographic details, study design, patient and procedural characteristics, and outcomes (operative time, estimated blood loss, length of stay, pain, complications, continence, reoperation, follow-up). Data were summarized descriptively in tables/figures; no meta-analysis was performed due to heterogeneity of reported data. RESULTS: Of 218 records screened, 66 studies were included from 2004 to 2024. Many were case reports/series. Feasibility reports for catheterizable channels (±augmentation/BNR) showed low conversion-to-open (7%), complication rate of 16.7% (most commonly stomal stenosis, wound infection, UTI), mean length of stay 5.7 days, and reported success/continence of ∼99%. Six retrospective comparisons (136 robotic vs 121 open cases) found higher (∼40%) but similar complication, reoperation, and continence rates between the robotic and open approach. Descriptive trends favoring robotics were lower postoperative morphine equivalents, less estimated blood loss (EBL) and shorter hospital stays. However all studies reported longer robotic operative times. CONCLUSIONS: Current literature suggests that robotic major reconstruction in pediatric urology is feasible and safe in experienced hands, with acceptable short and mid-term outcomes in experienced centers. However, long-term functional and overall outcomes remain limited compared to open cohorts. Available comparative studies report broadly similar outcomes, though these findings should be interpreted cautiously given heterogeneity and limited follow up. Adoption of robotic surgery for lower urinary tract reconstruction in children remains constrained by pediatric anatomy, costs, learning curves, and case volume. Standardized definitions of continence, rigorous complication reporting, prospective multicenter data, cost analyses, and long-term functional follow-up are needed to benchmark and optimize care.

Genital surgery in children with differences of sex development (DSD): Strengths and concerns across diverging regulations in four European countries.

Weil L, Hoebeke P, Kalfa N … +2 more , Stein R, Wolffenbuttel KP

J Pediatr Urol · 2026 Jun · PMID 42302587 · Publisher ↗

Differences of Sex Development (DSD) is a collective term for a heterogeneous group of rare congenital conditions characterized by atypical genetic, gonadal, or genital sexual development. The treatment of children with... Differences of Sex Development (DSD) is a collective term for a heterogeneous group of rare congenital conditions characterized by atypical genetic, gonadal, or genital sexual development. The treatment of children with DSD, particularly the indications for and timing of surgical interventions, has been the subject of debate for decades. In recent years, social developments emphasizing children's rights to self-determination and bodily integrity, along with increasing societal acceptance of atypical sex characteristics, have encouraged a more cautious approach toward early genital surgery in children with DSD. In 2019, the European Parliament adopted a resolution urging Member States to enact legislation prohibiting elective genital surgical interventions on intersex infants and children. Since then, several countries have indeed implemented restrictive measures, including legal bans on early surgical procedures. In this paper, we share the experiences and insights gained in recent years as pediatric urologists working in four neighboring countries in multidisciplinary university centers specializing in DSD care and research. We focus on current approaches to the care of children with DSD, the evolution of relevant national policies over time, and the nature and impact of recently introduced restrictive regulations on early surgical interventions. By presenting perspectives from pediatric urologists across these four countries, we aim to contribute to ongoing discussions on the alignment and refinement of surgical treatment practices for children with DSD.

Exploring precision risk in pediatric vesicoureteral reflux: Innate immune gene variations and reflux outcomes in the RIVUR cohort.

Kim JK, Misseri R, Roth J … +3 more , Schwaderer A, Zhang S, Hains DS

J Pediatr Urol · 2026 Jun · PMID 42302586 · Publisher ↗

INTRODUCTION: Children with vesicoureteral reflux (VUR) are at increased risk for morbidity from recurrent urinary tract infections (UTIs), yet the factors influencing spontaneous VUR resolution remain poorly defined. Th... INTRODUCTION: Children with vesicoureteral reflux (VUR) are at increased risk for morbidity from recurrent urinary tract infections (UTIs), yet the factors influencing spontaneous VUR resolution remain poorly defined. This study evaluates whether genetic variations in key urinary innate immune effectors (DEFA1A3, DMBT1, and RNASE7) influences VUR resolution and interacts with prophylaxis to alter clinical response. METHODS: We conducted a secondary analysis of 303 RIVUR participants with available DEFA1A3 and DMBT1 copy number variation (CNV) data and RNASE7 rs1263872 genotype. Primary outcomes were (1) VUR improvement (decrease in grade) and (2) VUR resolution at study exit. Multivariable logistic regression models included genotype, treatment, and their interactions, adjusting for age, sex, baseline grade (high vs low), laterality, bowel/bladder dysfunction, and any UTI. Internal validation used 2000-sample bootstrap with bias-corrected and accelerated confidence intervals and influence diagnostics. RESULTS: Clinical covariates did not significantly predict VUR improvement. Children with DEFA1A3 CNV >5 had higher odds of improvement (OR 2.36, 95% CI 1.12-4.96, p = 0.023), an effect that remained significant in bootstrap analyses. High-grade VUR was associated with lower odds of resolution (OR 0.34, 95% CI 0.12-0.94, p = 0.038). A significant interaction was observed between prophylaxis and high DMBT1 copy number for VUR resolution (interaction OR 2.99, 95% CI 1.11-8.04, p = 0.031); no interaction was seen for improvement. RNASE7 rs1263872 was not associated with either outcome. CONCLUSION: Innate immune gene variation may contribute to heterogeneity in VUR outcomes. High DEFA1A3 copy number was associated with reflux improvement and a DMBT1-prophylaxis interaction was associated with reflux resolution. The results of this study is hypothesis-generating and prompt further evaluation to assess whether a subset of children may experience structural benefit from prophylaxis or have a more favorable natural history based on their innate immune genotype.

Long-term outcomes of surgical correction of ventral penile curvature in children: Patient-reported measures, surgical results, and decisional regret.

Anttila A, Taskinen S, Pakkasjärvi N

J Pediatr Urol · 2026 May · PMID 42288401 · Publisher ↗

INTRODUCTION: There is a dearth of data on long-term outcomes, including patient-reported outcomes (PROMs), decisional regret, and complication rates for surgical correction of isolated ventral penile curvature in childh... INTRODUCTION: There is a dearth of data on long-term outcomes, including patient-reported outcomes (PROMs), decisional regret, and complication rates for surgical correction of isolated ventral penile curvature in childhood. PATIENTS AND METHODS: Twenty-six children treated for ventral curvature between 1993 and 2008 were identified; 24 met inclusion criteria (isolated ventral curvature without hypospadias or need for urethral reconstruction). Surgical correction consisted of degloving alone or degloving with Nesbit-like dorsal plication when residual curvature >20° persisted after degloving. PROMs were collected via pre-mailed validated questionnaires after puberty: Danish Prostatic Symptom Score (DAN-PSS) for LUTS, Erection Hardness Score (EHS) for erectile function, Penile Perception Score (PPS) for cosmetic perception, and items assessing decisional regret and perceived appropriateness of surgical timing. RESULTS: Curvature was corrected intraoperatively in all 24 patients. Twelve underwent degloving alone and 12 required additional dorsal plication. During long-term follow-up (median 14.2 years), one patient (4%) underwent re-operation for residual curvature, and three (13%) underwent cosmetic revisions; two (8%) underwent cystoscopy for flow concerns. 71% returned PROMs at a median age of 16.2 years. LUTS were uncommon, with low bother scores. Erectile function was favorable: 87% (13/15) reported EHS 4 and 93% (14/15) reported ejaculation. Cosmetic outcomes were favorable, with PPS dissatisfaction rates comparable to controls. Two patients reported dissatisfaction with overall appearance, and one with residual subjective curvature. No patient expressed decisional regret, and 88% felt timing of surgery was appropriate. CONCLUSION: Early surgical correction of isolated ventral penile curvature using degloving with or without dorsal plication provided durable anatomical correction and favorable long-term functional and cosmetic outcomes. These findings support early intervention as an effective approach with sustained patient-perceived benefits.

Comparison of quality of life in children with posterior urethral valves, isolated hydronephrosis and minor urologic conditions.

Maher S, Santos JD, Selvathesan N … +11 more , Flanders D, Mikhail M, Miranda B, Goraya N, Kim JK, Khondker A, Romao R, Salle JP, Chua M, Lorenzo AJ, Rickard M

J Pediatr Urol · 2026 Jun · PMID 42287855 · Publisher ↗

OBJECTIVE: To compare the quality of life (QoL) and family impact scores of children with posterior urethral valves (PUV), isolated hydronephrosis (HN), and those with minor urologic conditions, referred to here as minor... OBJECTIVE: To compare the quality of life (QoL) and family impact scores of children with posterior urethral valves (PUV), isolated hydronephrosis (HN), and those with minor urologic conditions, referred to here as minor urologic controls (MUC). METHODS: From December 2022 to April 2025, the PedsQL Inventory and Family Impact Module (FIM) questionnaires were distributed to patients in dedicated PUV, HN, and community-based urology clinics. Higher scores indicate better QoL. Children ≥8 years self-completed the questionnaires, while parents served as proxies for younger children. PUV patients were compared to HN patients and MUC. RESULTS: A total of 331 patients were included (124 PUV, 101 HN, and 106 MUC). The median age differed across groups, with HN patients being the youngest (median: 7 months), followed by MUC patients (median: 36 months) and PUV patients (median: 79.5 months). Overall, PUV patients scored similarly to HN patients and MUC in QoL and FIM scores. When stratified by age, however, PUV patients <2 years old had lower median scores in total QoL, psychosocial, and family functioning domains compared to other groups. CONCLUSION: Overall, PUV was not associated with lower QoL or family impact scores compared to comparator groups in this tertiary-care cohort; however, lower scores were observed among younger children with PUV, likely reflecting parent-perceived burden early in the disease course. This highlights the importance of age-tailored support and close monitoring, particularly for younger children and families navigating early post-diagnosis care.
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