
@Article{cju.2026.074216,
AUTHOR = {Elisa Berdondini, Ahmed Eissa, Mauro Silvani, Andrea Margara, Mauro Gacci, Salvatore Voce, Giulio Reale, Juan Ignacio Martinez-Salamanca, Giuseppe Maiolino},
TITLE = {Female urethral surgery: a single-referral-center experience with practical tips and tricks},
JOURNAL = {Canadian Journal of Urology},
VOLUME = {},
YEAR = {},
NUMBER = {},
PAGES = {{pages}},
URL = {http://www.techscience.com/CJU/online/detail/27489},
ISSN = {1488-5581},
ABSTRACT = { <b>Introductions:</b> Female lower urinary tract symptoms (LUTS) are heterogeneous and often reflect bladder outlet obstruction (BOO) from anatomic urethral disease. Evidence guiding surgery remains fragmented. This study aimed to evaluate surgical and patient-reported outcomes after reconstructive surgery for female anatomical urethral disease. <b>Materials and Methods:</b> We retrospectively analyzed a prospectively maintained, single-surgeon database of women undergoing urethral surgery (January 2017–April 2024) for female urethral stricture (FUS), female urethral diverticulum (FUD), or periurethral masses. Standardized preoperative assessment was applied; procedures included dorsal inlay buccal mucosa graft (DMG), ventral onlay grafts (VOG, buccal or vaginal), partial diverticulectomy, and mass excision with selective reinforcement. Outcomes comprised perioperative events, reintervention, and patient-reported symptoms (modified International Consultation on Incontinence Questionnaire Female Lower Urinary Tract Symptoms long form, ICIQ-FLUTS LF), compared pre–post using Wilcoxon tests. <b>Results:</b> 116 women (mean age 50.6 ± 13.8 years) were included. Ventral urethroplasty (n = 62) predominantly used buccal grafts (88.7%); dorsal urethroplasty was uniformly DMG (n = 13). FUD (n = 31) underwent partial diverticulectomy with periurethral fascial reconstruction; periurethral masses (n = 10) were managed according to pathology with frequent fascial reinforcement. Complication rates were low in ventral (4.8%) and dorsal (7.7%) urethroplasties, modest for masses (10%), and higher after FUD (32.2%), although largely self-limited pain. Persistent stress incontinence occurred in two FUD patients. At a median 32-month follow-up, most ICIQ-FLUTS domains improved significantly across groups (storage, voiding, post-micturition, pain/burning); incontinence improved after ventral urethroplasty and FUD. <b>Conclusions:</b> In experienced hands, reconstructive surgery for female urethral disease yields durable symptom relief with low morbidity. Technique selection that preserves sphincteric function and periurethral support, combined with selective use of grafts, optimizes continence and minimizes complications.},
DOI = {10.32604/cju.2026.074216}
}



