Radical nephroureterectomy with an ipsilateral bladder cuff is the referent standard for management of muscle-invasive, high-grade, or bulky upper-tract urothelial carcinoma (UTUC). Nonetheless, certain patients with UTUC have imperative or elective indications for kidney preservation thereby lending to more conservative strategies for management of this disease. Areas covered: A review of the PubMED and Medline databases was performed to identify original scientific and review articles discussing retrograde ureteroscopic or percutaneous antegrade resection of UTUC tumors published between 1995 and 2016. Comparative studies with radical nephroureterectomy were also included. Expert commentary: Endoscopic ablative treatments via retrograde or antegrade approaches may appropriately treat small, solitary, and low risk UTUC tumors. Recurrences in the ipsilateral upper-tract and bladder distal to the original tumor can occur following nephron-sparing treatments and therefore a vigilant surveillance program with a compliant patient is essential when pursuing this treatment approach.
What started as a resident quality safety project 5 years ago has demonstrated a reduction in infections and hospital admissions following TRUS PNB. Our institutional practice now routinely uses povidone-iodine or chlorhexidine as an adjunct to oral quinolones for TRUS PNB perioperative prophylaxis.
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