Outcomes of Three Vasovasostomy Surgical Techniques in Vasectomized Men: A Systematic Review of the Current Literature

Author:

Duijn M.ORCID,van der Zee J. A.,Bachour Y.

Abstract

AbstractTo investigate which surgical technique, macroscopic, microscopic or robot-assisted microscopic, shows highest postoperative patency- and pregnancy rates for vasectomy reversal (VR) by vasovasostomy (VV). This study is an updated version of the systematic review and meta-analysis entitled: “Outcomes of Macrosurgical Versus Microsurgical Vasovasostomy in Vasectomized Men: a Systematic Review and Meta-analysis” published in 2021. We performed a systematic review of the English-, Dutch-, and German-language literature that described postoperative outcomes of macroscopic, microscopic, or robot-assisted microscopic VV for VR. PubMed National Library of Medicine/MEDLINE, Embase, CENTRAL, The Cochrane Library, Web of Science and Scopus were searched from inception to June 2021. Two reviewers independently examined the studies and associated data for eligibility. Primary outcomes were postoperative patency and pregnancy rates. Data on interval to reversal (≤ 7 years and > 7 years) and postoperative complications were also extracted. Forty-nine studies met the inclusion criteria. We identified 46 retrospective studies and three randomized controlled trials (RCT). A total of 10,088 procedures were included. 6822 patients remained after loss to follow-up. The mean age at reversal of vasectomy was 38.0 years, and the mean interval to reversal was 6.5 years. The pooled mean postoperative patency rate was slightly higher after robot-assisted microsurgical VV (92.7%), compared to macrosurgical (81.9%) and pure microsurgical (90.1%) VV. Postoperative pregnancy rates were 42.7%, 69.7%, and 33.3% after macroscopic, pure microscopic and robot-assisted microscopic VV, respectively. Our results showed that microsurgical and robot-assisted microsurgical VV are associated with higher postoperative patency rates compared to the macrosurgical technique. VV with microsurgical assistance showed the highest post-operative pregnancy rates. However, more research is needed due to lack of RCTs and data on robot-assisted microsurgical VV.

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

General Medicine

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