The robotic-assisted free jejunal flap for neovaginal canal creation in gender-affirming vaginoplasties.
Publication details: 2024; ; ISSN:- 0738-1085
- *Free Tissue Flaps
- *Jejunum
- *Robotic Surgical Procedures
- *Sex Reassignment Surgery
- *Vagina
- Adult
- Aged
- Female
- Free Tissue Flaps/tr [Transplantation]
- Humans
- Jejunum/su [Surgery]
- Jejunum/tr [Transplantation]
- Male
- Middle Aged
- Plastic Surgery Procedures/mt [Methods]
- Retrospective Studies
- Robotic Surgical Procedures/mt [Methods]
- Sex Reassignment Surgery/mt [Methods]
- Surgically-Created Structures
- Treatment Outcome
- Vagina/ab [Abnormalities]
- Vagina/su [Surgery]
- Young Adult
- -- Automated
- MedStar Franklin Square Medical Center
- MedStar Georgetown University Hospital/MedStar Washington Hospital Center
- Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery
- Plastic Surgery Residency
- Case Reports
- Journal Article
Item type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Journal Article | MedStar Authors Catalog | Article | Available | 38887138 |
Available online from MWHC library: 1996 - 2002
CONCLUSION: Gender-affirming surgeons should consider a free vascularized segment of jejunum as an option to line the neovaginal canal in the correct patients. Copyright © 2024 Wiley Periodicals LLC.
INTRODUCTION: One of the biggest challenges with gender-affirming vaginoplasty was the creation of a long-lasting, durable, patent, and self-lubricating neovaginal canal that allowed for spontaneous, pain-free sexual intercourse. The jejunum was a durable, physiologic, and intestinal option to create the neovaginal canal that minimizes the adverse effects of skin graft, peritoneal, and colonic vaginoplasties. Free jejunal vaginoplasties had been performed in cis females for congenital genitourinary anomalies like Mullerian agenesis or after gynecologic-oncologic surgery but had yet to be reported for gender-affirming vaginoplasties. The purpose of this report was to present a technique for a physiologic, intestinal, gender-affirming vaginoplasty without the disadvantages of colonic vaginoplasties.
PATIENTS AND METHODS: This report presented six patients, all natal males who identified as female, undergoing robotic-assisted free jejunal flap gender-affirming vaginoplasty. Mean age was 35.8 years (range: 21-66). Mean body mass index was 33.2 kg/m2 (range: 28.0-41.0). The proximal aspect of the neovaginal canal was created intra-abdominally by elevating peritoneal flaps from the posterior bladder wall to be reflected downward into the external neovaginal canal. The jejunal flap was harvested. The greater saphenous vein was harvested to create an arteriovenous loop between the flap vessels and the recipient femoral artery in an end-to-side fashion and a branch of the femoral vein. The jejunal flap was passed intra-abdominally through the groin incision and then trans-peritoneally into the neovaginal canal. The jejunal segment was inset to the proximal peritoneal flaps and the distal inverted penoscrotal skin of the neovaginal introitus.
RESULTS: Mean length of the harvest jejunal segment was 19.2 cm (range: 15-20). Mean time to ambulation, foley removal, and first vaginal dilation were 3.3 (range: 3-4), 4.0 (range: 3-5), and 4.5 days (range: 4-6), respectively. By a mean follow-up duration of 8.0 months (range: 1-14), mean vaginal depth and diameter were 7.0 and 1.3 cm (range: 1.0-1.5), respectively. Two (33.3%) patients experienced postoperative complications, including groin hematoma (n = 1, 16.7%) and reoperation for correction of dehiscence of the jejunal flap to the vaginal introitus (n = 1, 16.7%).
English