Practice Variation in the Management of Adult Hydroceles : A Multinational Survey
Background: Although hydrocele is one of the most common urologic pathologies, it is seldom studied, and the major urologic associations have no guidelines for the management of adult hydroceles. Objective: To characterize international practice variation in the treatment of adult hydroceles.Design,...
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ftunivhelsihelda:oai:helda.helsinki.fi:10138/568804 2024-02-11T10:05:03+01:00 Practice Variation in the Management of Adult Hydroceles : A Multinational Survey Forss, Mikko Bolsunovskyi, Kostiantyn Lee, Yung Kilpeläinen, Tuomas P. Aoki, Yoshitaka Gudjonsson, Sigurdur Herve, Francois Jarvinen, Petrus Malde, Sachin Miyazawa, Katsuhito Sairanen, Jukka Sander, Lotte Violette, Philippe D. Witte, Lambertus P. W. Guyatt, Gordon H. Tikkinen, Kari A. O. Research Programs Unit Faculty of Medicine HUS Abdominal Center Clinicum Urologian yksikkö Department of Surgery South Carelia Social and Health care District Eksote 2023-12-19T06:58:02Z 7 application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/10138/568804 eng eng Elsevier 10.1016/j.euros.2023.09.005 This work was supported by the Competitive Research Funding of the Helsinki University Hospital (TYH2020248; TYH2022330) and Sigrid Juselius Foundation. Open access funded by Helsinki University Library. The sponsors had no role in the analysis and interpretation of the data or the manuscript preparation, review, or approval. Forss , M , Bolsunovskyi , K , Lee , Y , Kilpeläinen , T P , Aoki , Y , Gudjonsson , S , Herve , F , Jarvinen , P , Malde , S , Miyazawa , K , Sairanen , J , Sander , L , Violette , P D , Witte , L P W , Guyatt , G H & Tikkinen , K A O 2023 , ' Practice Variation in the Management of Adult Hydroceles : A Multinational Survey ' , European urology open science , vol. 58 , pp. 1-7 . https://doi.org/10.1016/j.euros.2023.09.005 ORCID: /0000-0002-3579-3026/work/150702270 ORCID: /0000-0002-1389-8214/work/150702638 7942f8d8-4e5e-4a1e-878f-21ab402bae9d http://hdl.handle.net/10138/568804 001114280000001 cc_by_nc_nd openAccess info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess Hydrocele Physicians' practice patterns Practice variation Surgical procedures operative Survey Treatment outcome 3126 Surgery anesthesiology intensive care radiology Article publishedVersion 2023 ftunivhelsihelda 2024-01-18T00:01:14Z Background: Although hydrocele is one of the most common urologic pathologies, it is seldom studied, and the major urologic associations have no guidelines for the management of adult hydroceles. Objective: To characterize international practice variation in the treatment of adult hydroceles.Design, setting, and participants: An international survey was conducted addressing the management of hydroceles among urologists in Belgium, Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Japan, and the Netherlands from September to December 2020. We invited a random sample of 170 urologists from each country (except Iceland). Outcome measurements and statistical analysis: Urologists' treatment options, factors relevant for decision-making, expected patient satisfaction, and outcomes after aspiration versus surgery were assessed.Results and limitations: Of the 864 urologists contacted, 437 (51%) participated. Of the respondents, 202 (53%) performed both hydrocelectomies and aspiration, 147 (39%) performed hydrocelectomies only, and 30 (8%) performed aspiration only. In Belgium (83%), the Netherlands (75%), and Denmark (55%), urologists primarily performed hydrocelectomies only, whereas in Finland (84%), Japan (61%), and Iceland (91%), urologists performed both hydrocelectomies and aspiration. Urologists favored hydrocelectomy for large hydroceles (78.8% vs 37.5% for small), younger patients (66.0% for patients <50 yr vs 41.2% for >= 70 yr), patients with few or no comorbidities (62.3% vs 23.1% with multiple comorbidities), and patients without antithrombotic agents (53.5% vs 36.5% with antithrombotic agents). Most urologists considered patient satisfaction to be highest after hydrocelectomy (53.8% vs 9.9% after aspiration) despite believing that hydrocelectomy is more likely to cause complications (hematoma 77.8% vs 8.8% after aspiration). Estimates varied between countries.Conclusions: We found a large variation in the treatment of adult hydroceles within and between countries. Optimization of hydrocele management globally will require ... Article in Journal/Newspaper Iceland HELDA – University of Helsinki Open Repository |
institution |
Open Polar |
collection |
HELDA – University of Helsinki Open Repository |
op_collection_id |
ftunivhelsihelda |
language |
English |
topic |
Hydrocele Physicians' practice patterns Practice variation Surgical procedures operative Survey Treatment outcome 3126 Surgery anesthesiology intensive care radiology |
spellingShingle |
Hydrocele Physicians' practice patterns Practice variation Surgical procedures operative Survey Treatment outcome 3126 Surgery anesthesiology intensive care radiology Forss, Mikko Bolsunovskyi, Kostiantyn Lee, Yung Kilpeläinen, Tuomas P. Aoki, Yoshitaka Gudjonsson, Sigurdur Herve, Francois Jarvinen, Petrus Malde, Sachin Miyazawa, Katsuhito Sairanen, Jukka Sander, Lotte Violette, Philippe D. Witte, Lambertus P. W. Guyatt, Gordon H. Tikkinen, Kari A. O. Practice Variation in the Management of Adult Hydroceles : A Multinational Survey |
topic_facet |
Hydrocele Physicians' practice patterns Practice variation Surgical procedures operative Survey Treatment outcome 3126 Surgery anesthesiology intensive care radiology |
description |
Background: Although hydrocele is one of the most common urologic pathologies, it is seldom studied, and the major urologic associations have no guidelines for the management of adult hydroceles. Objective: To characterize international practice variation in the treatment of adult hydroceles.Design, setting, and participants: An international survey was conducted addressing the management of hydroceles among urologists in Belgium, Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Japan, and the Netherlands from September to December 2020. We invited a random sample of 170 urologists from each country (except Iceland). Outcome measurements and statistical analysis: Urologists' treatment options, factors relevant for decision-making, expected patient satisfaction, and outcomes after aspiration versus surgery were assessed.Results and limitations: Of the 864 urologists contacted, 437 (51%) participated. Of the respondents, 202 (53%) performed both hydrocelectomies and aspiration, 147 (39%) performed hydrocelectomies only, and 30 (8%) performed aspiration only. In Belgium (83%), the Netherlands (75%), and Denmark (55%), urologists primarily performed hydrocelectomies only, whereas in Finland (84%), Japan (61%), and Iceland (91%), urologists performed both hydrocelectomies and aspiration. Urologists favored hydrocelectomy for large hydroceles (78.8% vs 37.5% for small), younger patients (66.0% for patients <50 yr vs 41.2% for >= 70 yr), patients with few or no comorbidities (62.3% vs 23.1% with multiple comorbidities), and patients without antithrombotic agents (53.5% vs 36.5% with antithrombotic agents). Most urologists considered patient satisfaction to be highest after hydrocelectomy (53.8% vs 9.9% after aspiration) despite believing that hydrocelectomy is more likely to cause complications (hematoma 77.8% vs 8.8% after aspiration). Estimates varied between countries.Conclusions: We found a large variation in the treatment of adult hydroceles within and between countries. Optimization of hydrocele management globally will require ... |
author2 |
Research Programs Unit Faculty of Medicine HUS Abdominal Center Clinicum Urologian yksikkö Department of Surgery South Carelia Social and Health care District Eksote |
format |
Article in Journal/Newspaper |
author |
Forss, Mikko Bolsunovskyi, Kostiantyn Lee, Yung Kilpeläinen, Tuomas P. Aoki, Yoshitaka Gudjonsson, Sigurdur Herve, Francois Jarvinen, Petrus Malde, Sachin Miyazawa, Katsuhito Sairanen, Jukka Sander, Lotte Violette, Philippe D. Witte, Lambertus P. W. Guyatt, Gordon H. Tikkinen, Kari A. O. |
author_facet |
Forss, Mikko Bolsunovskyi, Kostiantyn Lee, Yung Kilpeläinen, Tuomas P. Aoki, Yoshitaka Gudjonsson, Sigurdur Herve, Francois Jarvinen, Petrus Malde, Sachin Miyazawa, Katsuhito Sairanen, Jukka Sander, Lotte Violette, Philippe D. Witte, Lambertus P. W. Guyatt, Gordon H. Tikkinen, Kari A. O. |
author_sort |
Forss, Mikko |
title |
Practice Variation in the Management of Adult Hydroceles : A Multinational Survey |
title_short |
Practice Variation in the Management of Adult Hydroceles : A Multinational Survey |
title_full |
Practice Variation in the Management of Adult Hydroceles : A Multinational Survey |
title_fullStr |
Practice Variation in the Management of Adult Hydroceles : A Multinational Survey |
title_full_unstemmed |
Practice Variation in the Management of Adult Hydroceles : A Multinational Survey |
title_sort |
practice variation in the management of adult hydroceles : a multinational survey |
publisher |
Elsevier |
publishDate |
2023 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/10138/568804 |
genre |
Iceland |
genre_facet |
Iceland |
op_relation |
10.1016/j.euros.2023.09.005 This work was supported by the Competitive Research Funding of the Helsinki University Hospital (TYH2020248; TYH2022330) and Sigrid Juselius Foundation. Open access funded by Helsinki University Library. The sponsors had no role in the analysis and interpretation of the data or the manuscript preparation, review, or approval. Forss , M , Bolsunovskyi , K , Lee , Y , Kilpeläinen , T P , Aoki , Y , Gudjonsson , S , Herve , F , Jarvinen , P , Malde , S , Miyazawa , K , Sairanen , J , Sander , L , Violette , P D , Witte , L P W , Guyatt , G H & Tikkinen , K A O 2023 , ' Practice Variation in the Management of Adult Hydroceles : A Multinational Survey ' , European urology open science , vol. 58 , pp. 1-7 . https://doi.org/10.1016/j.euros.2023.09.005 ORCID: /0000-0002-3579-3026/work/150702270 ORCID: /0000-0002-1389-8214/work/150702638 7942f8d8-4e5e-4a1e-878f-21ab402bae9d http://hdl.handle.net/10138/568804 001114280000001 |
op_rights |
cc_by_nc_nd openAccess info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess |
_version_ |
1790601886269702144 |