East Sussex Hospitals NHS Trust, Eastbourne, UK.
Medi Tech Trust, Eastbourne, UK.
BJU Int. 2022 Jul;130(1):18-25. doi: 10.1111/bju.15770. Epub 2022 Jun 3.
One of the widest variations in contemporary surgical practice between high and low, or low-middle, income countries is the utilisation of endoscopy as a means of treating urological pathology. The endoscopic management of lower urinary tract problems such as benign prostatic hypertrophy, bladder cancer and urethral strictures was established in the UK in the late 1970s, whilst its adoption into everyday practice in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) has been significantly retarded. It is still neither a major feature of urological training in those countries nor widely available to the patients that established consultants treat. Likewise, the explosion of less invasive technologies for treating upper tract stone disease in the 1980s, particularly the management of renal stone disease, has also lagged behind practice established in the UK over the last 40 years. This is not due to a lack of patients who could be treated endoscopically or restricted by the abilities of the surgeons in SSA. The restraint in assumption of these less-invasive management options is rather due to the physical availability of trained specialist surgeons, their access to basic infrastructure such as electricity and water, access to endoscopes and the peripheral equipment necessary to successfully deploy them, and the ability of patients to afford the disposable items required for less-invasive forms of management. Some endoscopic procedures are viable in resource-poor settings. However, they are largely dependent upon the supply of equipment from non-governmental organisations in high-income countries, frugal innovation to reduce individual procedure costs, adequately skilled mentors, and maintenance and supply chains to make them a durable option in patient management. Urolink and the Medi Tech Trust present their experience of how endoscopic surgery can be taught, and used sustainably, in a resource-poor healthcare environment.
在高收入和中低收入国家之间,当代外科实践中最大的差异之一是内镜作为治疗泌尿系统疾病的手段的应用。20 世纪 70 年代末,英国就确立了内镜治疗下尿路疾病(如良性前列腺增生、膀胱癌和尿道狭窄)的方法,而在撒哈拉以南非洲(SSA),内镜治疗的普及却大大滞后。内镜治疗在这些国家的泌尿外科培训中既不是主要内容,也不能广泛用于那些已确立的顾问治疗的患者。同样,20 世纪 80 年代,治疗上尿路结石病的微创技术(尤其是肾结石病的治疗)也呈爆炸式发展,但在过去的 40 年里,这些技术在英国的应用却落后了。这并不是因为缺乏可以接受内镜治疗的患者,也不是因为 SSA 外科医生的能力受限。对这些微创管理选择的限制,更多的是由于受过专门培训的外科医生的实际可用性、他们对电力和水等基本基础设施的获取、内镜和成功部署这些内镜所需的周边设备的获取,以及患者是否有能力负担得起微创管理所需的一次性用品。一些内镜手术在资源匮乏的环境中是可行的。然而,它们在很大程度上依赖于高收入国家的非政府组织提供设备、节俭创新以降低个别手术成本、有足够技能的导师,以及维持和供应链,以使它们成为患者管理中的一种持久选择。Urolink 和 MediTech Trust 介绍了他们在资源匮乏的医疗环境中教授和可持续使用内镜手术的经验。