PEDIATRICS Vol. 108 No. 1 July 2001, p. e7
ELECTRONIC ARTICLE:
Fetal Surgery for Posterior Urethral Valves: Long-Term
Postnatal Outcomes
Received Aug 21, 2000; accepted Feb 2, 2001.
, and
From the * Department of Urology and Pediatrics and
Objective. Fetal intervention for
obstructive uropathy was first performed at the University of
California, San Francisco in 1981. Indications for treatment were
bilateral hydronephrosis with oligohydramnios. Preintervention criteria
included fetal urinary electrolytes with Methods. A retrospective review of the University of
California, San Francisco fetal surgery database was performed for
patients with a prenatal diagnosis of obstructive uropathy. Medical
records from 1981 to 1999 were reviewed. Long-term follow-up was
documented if the cause of the urinary tract obstruction was posterior
urethral valves. We collected data points, focusing on time and type of intervention, fetal urinary electrolytes, appearance of fetal kidneys,
present renal function, length of follow-up, and present status of the
urinary tract.
Results. Forty patients were evaluated for fetal
intervention; 36 fetuses underwent surgery during this time period.
Postnatal confirmation of posterior urethral valves was demonstrated in
14 patients. All patients had favorable fetal urinary electrolytes.
Mean gestational age at intervention was 22.5 weeks. The procedures
performed included creation of cutaneous ureterostomies in 1, fetal
bladder marsupialization in 2, in utero ablation of valves in 2, and
placement of vesicoamniotic catheter in 9. Six deaths occurred before
term delivery with premature labor and the newborns succumbing to
respiratory failure. One pregnancy was terminated electively because of
shunt failure and declining appearance of fetal lungs and kidney. The
remaining 8 living patients had a mean follow-up of 11.6 years. Chronic renal disease with abnormal serum creatinine was present in 5 patients.
Two patients have undergone renal transplantation, and 1 is awaiting
organ donation. Five of the 8 living patients have had urinary
diversion with vesicostomy, cutaneous ureterostomy, or augmentation
cystoplasty with later reconstruction.
Conclusions. Fetal intervention for posterior urethral
valves carries a considerable risk to the fetus with fetal mortality
rate of 43%. The long-term outcomes indicate that intervention may not
change the prognosis of renal function or be a predictor for possible urinary diversion. Despite all of these patients' having favorable urinary electrolytes, this did not seem to have any implication postnatally. When counseling families about fetal intervention, efforts
should be focused on that intervention may assist in delivering the
fetus to term and that the sequelae of posterior urethral valves may
not be preventable. Fetal surgery for obstructive uropathy should be
performed only for the carefully selected patient who has
severe oligohydramnios and "normal"-appearing
kidneys.
Department of Surgery and Pediatrics, University of California, San
Francisco, California.
-microglobulin levels,
karyotyping, and detailed sonography specifically looking for renal
cortical cysts. We reviewed the outcomes of children who underwent
fetal intervention with specific long-term follow-up in patients who
were found postnatally to have posterior urethral valves.




