- Fendereski, Kiarad;
- McCormick, Benjamin J;
- Keihani, Sorena;
- Hagedorn, Judith C;
- Voelzke, Bryan;
- Selph, J Patrick;
- Figler, Bradley D;
- Johnsen, Niels V;
- da Silva, Rodrigo Donalisio;
- Broghammer, Joshua A;
- Gupta, Shubham;
- Miller, Brandi;
- Burks, Frank N;
- Eswara, Jairam R;
- Osterberg, E Charles;
- Carney, Kenneth J;
- Erickson, Brad A;
- Gretzer, Matthew B;
- Chung, Paul H;
- Harris, Catherine R;
- Murphy, Gregory P;
- Rusilko, Paul;
- Anderson, Katherine T;
- Shridharani, Anand;
- Benson, Cooper R;
- Alwaal, Amjad;
- Blaschko, Sarah D;
- Breyer, Benjamin N;
- McKibben, Maxim;
- Schwartz, Ian W;
- Simhan, Jay;
- Vanni, Alex J;
- Moses, Rachel A;
- Myers, Jeremy B
Objective
To determine patient outcomes across a range of pelvic fracture urethral injury (PFUI) severity. PFUI is a devastating consequence of a pelvic fracture. No study has stratified PFUI outcomes based on severity of the urethral distraction injury.Methods
Adult male patients with blunt-trauma-related PFUI were followed prospectively for a minimum of six months at 27 US medical centers from 2015-2020. Patients underwent retrograde cystourethroscopy and retrograde urethrography to determine injury severity and were categorized into three groups: (1) major urethral distraction, (2) minor urethral distraction, and (3) partial urethral injury. Major distraction vs minor distraction was determined by the ability to pass a cystoscope retrograde into the bladder. Simple statistics summarized differences between groups. Multi-variable analyses determined odds ratios for obstruction and urethroplasty controlling for urethral injury type, age, and Injury Severity Score.Results
There were 99 patients included, 72(72%) patients had major, 13(13%) had minor, and 14(14%) had partial urethral injuries. The rate of urethral obstruction differed in patients with major (95.8%), minor (84.6%), and partial injuries (50%) (P < 0.001). Urethroplasty was performed in 90% of major, 66.7% of minor, and 35.7% of partial injuries (P < 0.001).Conclusion
In PFUI, a spectrum of severity exists that influences outcomes. While major and minor distraction injuries are associated with a higher risk of developing urethral obstruction and need for urethroplasty, up to 50% of partial PFUI will result in obstruction, and as such need to be closely followed.