When you're facing another kidney stone surgery, it's natural to worry about how your past procedures might impact this one. A recent study dug into this by looking back at 115 patients who underwent a one-stage retrograde intrarenal surgery (RIRS) for kidney stones. The patients were grouped based on their surgical history: some had a previous percutaneous nephrolithotomy (PCNL), others had a prior RIRS, and some had no history of urinary stone surgery.
The key finding was that patients with a history of PCNL had significantly longer operative times—about 61.5 minutes on average, compared to around 53-51 minutes for the other groups. However, when it came to other important measures, there were no big differences. Hospital stays, increases in serum creatinine (a marker of kidney function), complication rates, and stone-free rates at one and four weeks were all similar across the groups. Complication rates hovered around 7-8%, and by four weeks, about 85-90% of patients were stone-free.
It's important to note that this was a retrospective study, meaning it looked back at existing data rather than randomly assigning patients to groups. This limits how strongly we can say the past surgery caused the longer operation times. Also, the study only followed patients for four weeks, so we don't know about long-term outcomes. While the results are reassuring for many, they come from a specific group of 115 patients, so they might not apply to everyone with kidney stones.