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  • Surgical Approaches and Out...
    Dagnæs-Hansen, Julia; Kristensen, Gitte Hjartbro; Stroomberg, Hein V.; Sørensen, Søren Schwartz; Røder, Martin Andreas

    European urology focus, November 2022, 2022-11-00, 20221101, Letnik: 8, Številka: 6
    Journal Article

    Living donor nephrectomy comprises a wide variety of different surgical techniques. Overall complication rates are low, and the choice of surgical technique depends on multiple factors such as the risk of complications, warm ischemia time, surgical time, and the surgeon’s expertise. The use of living kidney donors is increasing and there are several surgical approaches for donor nephrectomy but it remains unknown which procedure is optimal for the patient and the graft. To review different surgical techniques for living donor nephrectomy and compare complication rates, warm ischemia time, and delayed graft function. A systematic review of prospective studies involving surgical complications following living donor nephrectomy was conducted in the MEDLINE/PubMed and EMBASE databases according to the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis Protocols (PRISMA-P). Baseline data, perioperative and postoperative parameters, and postoperative complications are reported. Overall complication rates between surgical techniques were compared via analysis of variance with post hoc analysis. We included 35 studies involving 6398 patients and representing six different surgical procedures for living donor nephrectomy. Hand-assisted laparoscopic donor nephrectomy had a significantly higher overall complication rate compared to open, laparoscopic, retroperitoneoscopic, and laparoendoscopic single-site techniques (p < 0.005). The complication rates were low and no mortality was observed. The main limitation was varying reporting of complications, with only one-third of the studies using the Clavien-Dindo classification. No specific surgical approach seems superior in terms of complications, which were generally low. Different factors such as warm ischemia time, blood loss, and surgeon expertise define which surgical approach should be chosen. We looked at the different surgical methods for removing the kidney from a living kidney donor. Overall, the different surgical techniques were similar in terms of complications and no donors died in the studies we reviewed. The choice of procedure depends on multiple factors such as the expertise of the surgeon and the surgical center.