Twin babies with Hypospadias- Dilemmas in management!

Last Monday was like any other Monday. My pediatric urology clinic was full with appointments and I was getting into the rhythm of seeing children with complicated urinary problems and hypospadias. A young couple walked in with twin male babies, each about 7 months old. The boys were naughty and attentive and soon were soaking in the yellow and pink and greens of my outpatient clinic. I looked at the file and asked them the pediatric urological issues for which they were seeing me that day. They said their kid had hypospadias and both of them had hypospadias infact and they wanted to see a Pediatric urologist. Now that was a shocker!! Though this was not the first time that I was seeing twin boys with Hypospadias, but it was that once in two years phenomenon. And more striking since these boys had exactly the same type of hypospadias- which was distal penile hypospadias with mild chordee. Last year I had treated two brothers with hypospadias but the age was 3 and 5 years and thus difference in age was 2 years. The elder one has a mid penile hypospadias while the younger one had a distal penile hypospadias. I suddenly remembered the dilemmas which face a Pediatric Urologist & a Hypospadiologist while treating siblings with hypospadias.

• Which boy do you treat first – plan according to age – elder first or severity wise and severe hypospadias first and minor later?

• Whether you do them the same day or one after the other or with some gap of days in between?

• How will the parents manage two babies getting operated for the same thing at the same time?

• And if you operate one baby with hypospadias first and second one a few days later- what is the effect on their minds? How do they cope up with a situation where one has undergone a hypospadias surgery and the other one is waiting. Does the second kid get scared seeing the first one in pain after surgery and undergoing hospital visits and checkups? It was a tough situation to be in – for me as a hypospadias surgeon and even more for the parents who will have to care for the children 24×7 after surgery.

After a lot of deliberation, we decided that we do the hypospadias repair one after the other but on the consecutive days at MITR Hospital & Hypospadias Foundation. We admitted the elder sibling (with more severe hypospadias) for surgery on Tuesday morning and surgery was conducted as the first case in the morning. The younger kid was admitted on Wednesday morning and underwent uneventful repair on Wednesday itself. We arranged for two beds in one room so that both of them can share their side of the story. At least here there was no scope of having a feeling of being left out. Both of them for a fact got a HYPOSPADIAS SURGERY. Recovery period after surgery was smooth and both of them were discharged on Wednesday evening. The kids came back for follow-up on the same day after a week and their catheters were removed the same day. The children pee’d and actually compared their streams and for me luckily- both had good thick straight urine streams without any complications. Deep inside, throughout the recovery period, I was a bit worried about a complication happening. Luckily, everything went well and I had two happy kids with me. Now coming back to present case at hand- where I have a set of twin babies with hypospadias. So going by my previous experience, I think we will stick to the same plan. The only advantage here is that the kids are still less than one year of age and they won’t think much about surgery. I am planning to do them on a Tuesday and a Wednesday and then send them home on Wednesday itself.

Medicine lends itself to unusual off the script events every day and as we say every patient has a story. For us at Hypospadias Foundation – we believe every child hypospadias has a story with happy ending.

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    Increasing incidence of Hypospadias

    Hypospadias is recognized as a pediatric urological disorder, the incidence of which is on the rise over the last two decades. While researchers and clinicians agree that the detection and diagnosis rate of hypospadias has increased due to increased awareness, it is also certain that there are other factors which are contributing to the increased incidence of hypospadias.
    The last few studies have noted the incidence of hypospadias to be almost 1/150 newborn boys. This is substantial as compared to what was reported to be 1/250 boys two decades back.
    To understand what leads to higher incidence of hypospadias we have to understand in a simple language how Hypospadias happens. During the critical phase of sex development in the baby during pregnancy – at around 8 weeks both the male and female sexual organs look similar. Between 8-14 weeks, under the influence of male hormones produced by the testis (Testosterone and Dihydrotestosterone, also called androgens) these organs develop into male organs. These hormones cause the genital tubercle to enlarge and become a penis and at the same time the urinary passage (called urethra) starts developing on the underside of the penis and closes like a zipper from the bottom to the tip of penis. All this is a very intricate coordinated activity and guided by levels and actions of male hormones. Blockage of action of these hormones or lower levels in this critical phase lead to an incomplete urethra resulting in hypospadias. Thus, the urethra falls short of the tip and urethral opening remains on the underside of penis.
    Recent research has shown that the rising levels of chemicals in environment so called Endocrine disruptors have been responsible in some ways for this rise in the incidence of hypospadias and other reproductive anomalies such as undescended testis, low sperm counts and testicular cancer. These chemicals come from pesticides, colouring agents, dyes, hair sprays, plastics used in cars, bottles etc. They are all around us and it may take us many years to see their full blown effect on human bodies. Even hormonal treatment for infertility such as IVF, smoking and excessive analgesic use during pregnancy has been shown to have increase the risk of hypospadias. In an environment loaded with pollution and unknown synthetic chemical residues, we can never ascertain fully how the cumulative effect of all these agents affects the gentle developing organs of the baby.
    We recently conducted the largest study yet in India about finding out the incidence of hypospadias and undescended testis in India. We found that incidence of undescended testis has increased to almost 5% and hypospadias 1/126 babies in India. Earlier reported incidence for undescended testis was 1.6% in 1971, so it has almost tripled in last 40 years. Hypospadias incidence has not been reported in India yet.
    Extrapolating these figures, there will be around 110,000 babies born with Hypospadias every year in India and they will need counseling and proper treatment. Similarly, almost 7 lakh (700,000) babies will be born with undescended testis and almost 30% of these – almost 2 lakh babies (200,000) will need surgery for undescended testis every year. These numbers are not small by any stretch of imagination and call for further research and awareness among general public, governmental organisations as well as doctors.
    Dr A.K.Singal, Pediatric urologist & Hypospadiologist, presented these findings at European Society of Pediatric Urology Annual Congress in Genoa, Italy in April 2013. The study was very well appreciated and we won a prize also for it.
    At Hypospadias Foundation, we have committed ourselves to excellent clinical care of children with Hypospadias but equally importantly towards meaningful clinical research in the field of Hypospadiology also. In India typically we follow data from the west as we do not have means to collect our own data or just that our priorities towards care for the large population are so huge that we do not have time/ resources for research. Since Hypospadias Foundation is an autonomous body, we have made research our important goal and made it a missionary zeal to collect our own data within India, learn from our own data and then share the research results with the rest of the world.
    Medical Science moves forwards by doing clinical work and also analyzing that we are doing today is better than what we did yesterday. But if we can use scientific research tools to find out why hypospadias happen, why are they increasing and what can be done to decrease the incidence – that will be the most fruitful use of science. Prevention is always better than treatment.

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