Researchers looked back at medical records for 20 patients with cloaca treated at a pediatric hospital in Cairo between 2021 and 2024. Cloaca is a complex birth defect where the rectum, vagina, and urinary tract open into a single common channel instead of separately. The study aimed to describe how surgeons chose different surgical approaches based on each child's specific anatomy.
The main finding was that surgeons used three different approaches depending on two anatomical measurements: vaginal depth and common channel length. For patients with a vaginal depth greater than 2 cm and a long common channel (over 3 cm), they performed a one-stage laparoscopic pull-through procedure (4 cases). For those with deep vagina but short common channel (under 3 cm), they used a single-stage posterior sagittal repair (6 cases). For patients with shallow vagina (less than 2 cm), they used a staged approach starting with a colostomy (10 cases).
The study did not report any outcomes, complications, or long-term results of these surgeries. This was a small, descriptive study from one hospital that simply recorded what surgeons did, not how well patients did afterward. Readers should understand this research describes surgical decision-making patterns at one center, but doesn't provide evidence about which approach leads to better outcomes or fewer complications.