# Elective flexible ureteroscopy with suction sheaths for infectious stones in prior UTI patients

**Authors:** Angelo Cormio, Daniele Castellani, Steffi Kar Kei Yuen, Khi Yung Fong, Deepak Ragoori, Laurian Dragos, Mohamed Omar, Luigi Cormio, Guohua Zeng, Wei Zhu, Shusheng Liu, Thomas R. W. Herrmann, Bhaskar K. Somani, Chi Fai Ng, Mohamed Elshazly, Vineet Gauhar

PMC · DOI: 10.1002/bco2.70151 · BJUI Compass · 2026-02-04

## TL;DR

The study shows that using flexible suction sheaths during ureteroscopy is safe and effective for treating kidney and ureter stones in patients with prior UTIs.

## Contribution

The study introduces the use of flexible and navigable suction sheaths (FANS) for treating infectious stones after UTI management.

## Key findings

- Elective flexible ureteroscopy with FANS achieved a 92.4% combined stone-free rate with no sepsis cases.
- Renal function improved at 30 days and 3 months post-procedure.
- Fever requiring extended antibiotics occurred in 29.9% of patients.

## Abstract

This study aims to evaluate the safety, efficacy and clinical outcomes of elective flexible ureteroscopy using flexible and navigable suction ureteral access sheaths (FANS) in patients with upper tract infectious stones following initial management of systemic urinary tract infections (UTIs).

We conducted a multicentre prospective analysis of patients with infectious ureteral or kidney stones (struvite or calcium carbonate‐apatite) who underwent flexible ureteroscopy using FANS between March 2024 and March 2025. All patients had prior systemic UTI management with a minimum 6‐week interval before definitive stone treatment. Stone‐free rate was assessed at 30 days using a CT scan.

The cohort included 144 patients (median age 51 years, 70.1% female) with a median stone diameter of 1.9 cm. 20.1% had initially received only antibiotic treatment, whereas 79.9% had also received emergency drainage. Forty‐seven patients (32.6%) had emphysematous pyelonephritis at initial presentation. Median operative time was 40 min with a 1‐day hospital stay. Notable findings included zero cases of sepsis and a 29.9% rate of postoperative fever requiring extended antibiotics up to 2 weeks. Zero residual fragments were achieved in 48.6% and a single fragment up to 2 mm in 43.8% of patients (92.4% combined stone‐free rate). Renal function improved at 30 days (median creatinine decrease −15 μmol/L) and 3 months (−18 μmol/L). Fever rate was 29.8% in the emphysematous pyelonephritis subgroup.

Elective flexible ureteroscopy using FANS for upper tract infectious stones is feasible for its excellent safety profile with no sepsis cases and high stone‐free rates. FANS technology appears to offer significant advantages in this challenging patient population by mitigating postoperative sepsis due to debris aspiration, reduction of pyelovenous backflow of contaminated irrigation fluids and improved stone fragment evacuation.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** Fever (MESH:D005334), emphysematous pyelonephritis (MESH:D011704), infectious stones (MESH:D003141), UTIs (MESH:D014552), sepsis (MESH:D018805), Stone (MESH:D007669)
- **Chemicals:** struvite (MESH:D000069877), creatinine (MESH:D003404), calcium carbonate (MESH:D002119)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## References

28 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12869839/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12869839