Standardizing outcomes in urethral stricture surgery: beyond anatomic patency.

Outcome assessment after urethral stricture surgery remains inconsistent, with success traditionally defined by anatomical patency or absence of reintervention. Growing recognition of discordance between objective findings and patient experience has made it necessary to re-evaluate how outcomes are measured. This review explores contemporary approaches to defining success and highlights the need for standardized, patient-centered endpoints.

Current literature shows that anatomical and objective functional measures alone fail to capture the complexity of postoperative recovery. Patient-reported outcome measures have gained increasing importance, revealing persistent urinary symptoms, sexual dysfunction, and quality-of-life impairment despite technically successful reconstruction. Functional outcomes such as storage symptoms, ejaculatory changes, and perceived penile alterations are increasingly recognized as key determinants of satisfaction. Emerging composite outcomes aim to integrate anatomical, functional, and patient-reported domains into a unified framework.

Outcome evaluation in urethral stricture surgery is shifting toward multidimensional assessment that prioritizes patient perception alongside traditional metrics. Standardized composite endpoints may improve comparability across studies, support shared decision-making, and better align surgical success with patient expectations.

Current opinion in urology. 2026 May 05 [Epub ahead of print]

Francesco Chierigo, Tommaso Saccucci, Guglielmo Mantica, Trauma, Reconstructive Urology Working Party of the European Association of Urology Young Academic Urologists

Department of Urology, Department of Health Science, University of Milan, ASST Santi Paolo e Carlo, Milan., Department of Surgical and Diagnostic Integrated Sciences (DISC), University of Genova, Genova, Italy.