Surgical experience is predictive for bladder tumour resection quality

Authors

  • Sarah H. Bube
  • Rasmus Brix
  • Maya B. Christensen
  • Mathias Thostrup
  • Søren Grimstrup
  • Rikke B. Hansen
  • Claus Dahl
  • Lars Konge
  • Nessn Azawi

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1080/21681805.2022.2119271

Abstract

Abstract Objectives To assess the resection quality of transurethral bladder tumour resection (TURBT) and the association to surgeon experience depending on the presence of detrusor muscle. Methods A retrospective study on 640 TURBT procedures performed at Zealand University Hospital, Denmark, from 1 January 2015 − 31 December 2016. Data included patient characteristics, procedure type, surgeon category, supervisor presence, surgical report data, pathological data, complications data and recurrence data. Analysis was performed using simple and multiple logistic regression on the association between surgeon experience and the presence of detrusor muscle in resected tissue from TURBT. Results Supervised junior residents had significant lower detrusor muscle presence (73%) compared with consultants (83%) (OR = 0.4, 95% CI = 0.21–0.83). Limitations were the retrospective design and the diversity of included TURBT. Conclusions It was found that surgical experience predicts detrusor muscle presence and supervised junior residents performing TURBT on patients resulted in less detrusor muscle than consultants.

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Published

2022-11-02

How to Cite

Bube, S. H., Brix, R., Christensen, M. B., Thostrup, M., Grimstrup, S., Hansen, R. B., … Azawi, N. (2022). Surgical experience is predictive for bladder tumour resection quality. Scandinavian Journal of Urology, 56(5-6), 391–396. https://doi.org/10.1080/21681805.2022.2119271

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Articles