5th Company Session

14 Aug 2025 16:00 16:50
Boyke SoebhaliIndonesia Moderator Updates on Pharmacological Therapy for UrolithiasisUrolithiasis, a prevalent and recurrent urological condition, requires a multifaceted approach combining pharmacological, dietary, and surgical interventions. Recent advancements in pharmacological therapy emphasize personalized treatment based on stone composition, metabolic profiles, and patient-specific risk factors. For calcium oxalate stones, the most common type, thiazide diuretics remain first-line therapy to reduce urinary calcium excretion, while potassium citrate is recommended to increase urinary citrate levels, inhibiting stone formation. Dietary modifications, such as reduced oxalate intake and adequate calcium consumption, are adjunctive measures. In primary hyperoxaluria (PH), novel RNA interference (RNAi) agents like lumasiran and nedosiran significantly lower urinary oxalate levels, offering promising alternatives for patients unresponsive to pyridoxine. Uric acid stones are managed with urinary alkalinization using potassium citrate or sodium bicarbonate to maintain a pH >6.0, enhancing uric acid solubility. Xanthine oxidase inhibitors (allopurinol, febuxostat) are reserved for hyperuricemic patients. Cystine stones, though rare, require alkalinization and thiol-based drugs (tiopronin) to improve cystine solubility. Struvite stones, associated with urease-producing infections, necessitate antibiotics and urinary acidification (e.g., L-methionine) alongside surgical removal. Emerging therapies like theobromine show potential in inhibiting uric acid crystallization, while phytate demonstrates inhibitory effects on calcium salt aggregation. Medical expulsive therapy (MET) with alpha-blockers (tamsulosin) remains effective for distal ureteral stones (5–10 mm), reducing time to expulsion and need for surgery. However, MET efficacy diminishes for proximal stones or those >10 mm, necessitating surgical intervention. Future directions include optimizing RNAi therapies for hereditary stone diseases and integrating smartphone apps to enhance treatment adherence. A tailored, evidence-based approach combining pharmacological and lifestyle interventions is crucial for reducing recurrence and improving patient outcomes.Suction PCNL vs Suction RIRS? Do We Have a WinnerThe management of renal stones has evolved with the introduction of suction-assisted techniques in both percutaneous nephrolithotomy (PCNL) and retrograde intrarenal surgery (RIRS). Suction PCNL, including mini-PCNL and flexible mini-PCNL (F-mPCNL), utilizes negative pressure to improve stone clearance and reduce intrarenal pressure, while suction RIRS employs vacuum-assisted ureteral access sheaths (V-UAS) or direct in-scope suction (DISS) to enhance fragment removal and minimize infectious complications. Recent studies highlight that suction PCNL achieves superior stone-free rates (SFRs) in a single session, particularly for stones >2 cm, with SFRs ranging from 93.8% to 95.1% compared to 77.8%–87.9% for suction RIRS. However, suction RIRS offers advantages in reduced invasiveness, shorter hospital stays (1–3 days vs. 2–5 days for PCNL), and lower complication rates (e.g., bleeding, transfusion needs). For infectious stones, suction RIRS with V-UAS demonstrates lower postoperative infection markers (CRP, PCT) and fewer febrile complications than PCNL . Operative times vary, with suction PCNL often being faster for large stones (47–82 min) but requiring fluoroscopy, while suction RIRS avoids tract-related risks but may necessitate staged procedures for stones >2 cm. Cost-effectiveness analyses favor suction PCNL due to fewer retreatments, though RIRS reduces radiation exposure.
Takaaki InoueJapan Moderator New Advancement on Retrograde Intrarenal SurgeryRetrograde intrarenal surgery (RIRS) has dramatically grown up around world for stone management. Why has RIRS been getting popullar and increasing nowadays?. The reaseon are absoulutely "Technological development with collaborated engineering comapny" and " Global communicaton and collaboration in Endourology". Endourology has still been improving and expanding more and more. Thereby, many novel devices and machine are launching faster. We, urologists should catch up this faster trend and acquire these knowledge for our clinical use. However, most of urologists can not catch up it. Therefore, I will share you all these novel chage of mind and tech-knowledge of stone field in this session. Do We Need Augmented Reality for Renal Stone Management?What is Augmented reality and Vertual reality in medicine?. The paradigm shift of medicine which includes AI, Robotics, VR, and AR etc named Digital transformation has been still emerging. Of course, these shift is gradually permeating in stone field. Especially, in terms of VR, AR, we wonder if this kind of DX is useful in stone management. if so, how do we use it in clinical practice? Today, I will talk these future role in stone management, and expectation. Which Laser for RIRS: Pulsed Thulium YAG Laser We can use three kind of laser such as Holumium YAG, Thulium YAG, and Thulium fiber laser for stone management. Which lase are best option for stone patients? I will talk about featurs and advantage of pulsed-Thulium YAG laser. There are two kinds of p-Tm;YAG laser machine nowadays. P^Tm;YAG has unique characteristics as laser wave. Therefore, this laser would be able to use Stone, BPH, UTUC. Especially, p-Tm YAG laser can utilize for Stone ablation, fragmentingand and UTUC ablation, shock wave. We will share our experoence and thoughts. New Advancement on Retrograde Intrarenal Surgery