Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Anna Kołodziej is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Anna Kołodziej.


Urology Journal | 2015

Urinary Tract Endometriosis

Anna Kołodziej; Wojciech Krajewski; Lukasz Dolowy; Lidia Hirnle

Recently, occurrence of urinary tract endometriosis (UTE) is more frequently diagnosed. According to literature, it refers to approximately 0.3 to even 12% of all women with endometriosis. The pathogenesis of UTE has not been clearly explained so far. The actually proposed hypotheses include embryonic, migration, transplantation, and iatrogenic theory. Most frequently UTE affects bladder, less often ureters and kidneys. One-third of patients remains asymptomatic or exhibits only minor manifestations. In symptomatic patients main complaints include dysuria, urinary urgency, and/or frequency, painful micturition, and burning sensation in the urethra and discomfort in the retropubic area. Treatment of UTE is challenging and can be pharmacological, surgical or can be a combination of both methods. In this paper we present a review of the literature concerning the UTE, its diagnosis and treatment.


Journal of Laparoendoscopic & Advanced Surgical Techniques | 2009

Antegrade endopyelotomy versus laparoscopic pyeloplasty for primary ureteropelvic junction obstruction.

Tomasz Szydełko; Roman Kopeć; Jarosław Kasprzak; Wojciech Apoznański; Anna Kołodziej; Romuald Zdrojowy; Jerzy Lorenz

OBJECTIVES A retrospective study was performed to compare the results of laparoscopic pyeloplasty and antegrade endopyelotomy and complications observed after the two procedures. MATERIALS AND METHODS Seventy-five endopyelotomies and 90 laparoscopic pyeloplasties in patients with primary ureteropelvic junction obstruction (UPJO) were performed. The diagnosis of UPJO was based on a complete medical history, ultrasonography, urography (IVU), and/or diuretic renography. In 52 cases, a Whitaker test was performed before endopyelotomy. The mean follow-up was 31 months in the endopyelotomy group and 28.5 months in the laparoscopy group. Complete success was defined as absence of any clinical symptoms combined with significant reduction of hydronephrosis on diuretic IVU and ultrasonography, and no sign of obstruction on diuretic IVU, diuretic renography, or Whitaker test. RESULTS Complete success was observed in 55.4% of patients after endopyelotomy and in 95.3% of patients after laparoscopic pyeloplasty. In patients with primary UPJO, laparoscopic procedures yield better therapeutic results than endopyelotomy, irrespective of the degree of hydronephrosis. The number of complications after the two procedures was comparable with the exception of intraoperative bleeding, which was more frequent in the case of endopyelotomy. CONCLUSIONS Laparoscopic pyeloplasty should be the procedure of choice in the treatment of primary UPJO.


Central European Journal of Urology 1\/2010 | 2015

The role of lasers in modern urology

Łukasz Dołowy; Wojciech Krajewski; Janusz Dembowski; Romuald Zdrojowy; Anna Kołodziej

Introduction The functioning of modern urological departments and the high level of service they provide is possible through, among other things, the use of modern laser techniques. Material and methods Open operations have been replaced by minimally invasive procedures, and classical surgical tools by advanced lasers. The search for new applications with lasers began as technology developed. Among many devices available, holmium, diode and thulium lasers are currently the most popular. Results Depending on the wavelength, the absorption by water and hemoglobin and the depth of penetration, lasers can be used for coagulation, vaporization and enucleation. In many centres, after all the possibilities of pharmacological treatment have been exhausted, lasers are used as the primary treatment for patients with benign prostatic hyperplasia, with therapeutic results that are better than those obtained through open or endoscopic operations. The use of lasers in the treatment of urolithiasis, urinary strictures and bladder tumours has made treatment of older patients with multiple comorbidities safe, without further necessity to modify the anticoagulant drug treatment. Laser procedures are additionally less invasive, reduce hospitalization time and enable a shorter bladder catheterization time, sometimes even eliminating the need for bladder catherterization completely. Such procedures are also characterized by more stable outcomes and a lower number of reoperations. Conclusions There are also indications that with the increased competition among laser manufacturers, decreased purchase and maintenance costs, and increased operational safety, laser equipment will become mandatory and indispensable asset in all urology wards.


Journal of Laparoendoscopic & Advanced Surgical Techniques | 2010

Comparison of Dismembered and Nondismembered Y-V Laparoscopic Pyeloplasty in Patients with Primary Hydronephrosis

Tomasz Szydełko; Jarosław Kasprzak; Wojciech Apoznański; Anna Kołodziej; Romuald Zdrojowy; Janusz Dembowski; Tadeusz Niezgoda

INTRODUCTION A retrospective study was performed to compare the results of dismembered and nondismembered Y-V laparoscopic pyeloplasties and the complications observed after the two types of surgery. MATERIALS AND METHODS Eighty-eight patients with ureteropelvic junction obstruction (UPJO) underwent a laparoscopic operation. In 2 cases, an open conversion was made. A laparoscopic Hynes-Anderson pyeloplasty (LH-AP) was performed on 50 patients, whereas a laparoscopic Y-V pyeloplasty (LY-VP) was performed in 36 cases. The diagnosis of UPJO was based on a complete medical history, ultrasonography, diuretic urography (IVU), and/or diuretic renography. The mean follow-up was 29 (range, 6-66) months. Complete success was defined as the absence of any clinical symptoms, combined with a significant reduction of hydronephrosis on IVU and ultrasonography, as well as no sign of obstruction on IVU and/or diuretic renography. RESULTS The mean operative time for LH-AP was 219 minutes and for LY-VP 185 minutes. The mean hospital stay after LH-AP was 5.9 days and after LY-VP 5.3 days. The overall success rate was 91.5% (91.8% for LH-AP patients and 91.2% for LY-VP patients). CONCLUSION LY-VP appears to be a safe, attractive alternative to LH-AP.


Medical Science Monitor | 2013

The clinical significance of lymphangiogenesis in renal cell carcinoma

Paweł Dębiński; Janusz Dembowski; Paweł Kowal; Tomasz Szydełko; Anna Kołodziej; Bartosz Małkiewicz; Krzysztof Tupikowski; Romuald Zdrojowy

Background The formation of lymphatic vessels (lymphangiogenesis) occurs in tumor tissues and is crucial for tumor development and progression in some cancers. Lymphangiogenesis and its clinical effect on renal cell carcinoma have been less thoroughly investigated in comparison with angiogenesis. The aim of this study was to evaluate the role of lymphangiogenesis as a prognostic factor in renal cell carcinoma (RCC). Material/Methods The expression of peritumoral/intratumoral lymphatics was studied by immunohistochemical methods in paraffin-embedded nephrectomy specimens from 133 patients with clear cell carcinoma. Patients were divided into 3 groups depending on postoperative follow-up: I) patients without metastases, II) patients with metastases during follow-up, and III) patients with metastases during the operation. Peritumoral lymphatics (PTL) and intratumoral lymphatics (ITL) were immunostained with a D2-40 antibody. Results The mean number of PTL present in each group was I=14.1, II=10.6, III=12.1. The mean number of ITL present in each group was I=0.7, II=2.3, III=2.3. The 3 groups showed statistically significant differences only in the case of ITL. A mean count of ITL ≥1 is significantly associated with an increased risk of regional lymph node involvement and distant metastasis. Patients with expression ITL >0.2 and PTL ≤15.2 had a significantly shorter cancer-specific survival. Conclusions The number of ITL showed an association with more aggressive cases of RCC and progression of disease. Therefore, the level of expression ITL, together with stage and histological grading, may provide valuable predictive information about the outcome of treatment.


Central European Journal of Urology 1\/2010 | 2016

Evidence-based recommendations on androgen deprivation therapy for localized and advanced prostate cancer

Tomasz Golabek; Jonathan Belsey; Tomasz Drewa; Anna Kołodziej; Iwona Skoneczna; Piotr Milecki; Jakub Dobruch; Marcin Słojewski; Piotr Chlosta

Introduction The management of prostate cancer (PC) is still evolving. Although, androgen deprivation therapy (ADT) is an established treatment option, particularly in patients with disseminated disease, important data regarding hormonal manipulation have recently emerged. The aim of this paper is to review the evidence on ADT, make recommendations and address areas of controversy associated with its use in men with PC. Material and methods An expert panel was convened. Areas related to the hormonal management of patients with PC requiring evidence review were identified and questions to be addressed by the panel were determined. Appropriate literature review was performed and included a search of online databases, bibliographic reviews and consultation with experts. Results The panel was able to provide recommendations on: 1) which patients with localised PC should receive androgen deprivation in conjunction with radiotherapy (RT); 2) what standard initial treatment should be used in metastatic hormone-naïve PC (MHNPC); 3) efficacy of androgen deprivation agents; 4) whether ADT should be continued in patients with castration resistant PC (CRPC). However, no recommendations could be made for combined ADT and very high-dose RT in patients with an intermediate-risk disease. Conclusions ADT remains the cornerstone of treatment for both metastatic hormone-naïve and castration-resistant PC. According to the expert panels opinion, based on the ERG report, luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone agonists might not be equivalent but this needs to be confirmed in long-term data. The combined use of ADT and RT improves outcome and survival in men with high-risk localised disease. The benefits in patients with intermediate-risk disease, particularly those subject to escalated dose RT are controversial.


Tissue Antigens | 2015

CTLA‐4 and CD28 genes' polymorphisms and renal cell carcinoma susceptibility in the Polish population – a prospective study

Krzysztof Tupikowski; Anna Partyka; Anna Kołodziej; Janusz Dembowski; P. Debinski; Agnieszka Halon; Romuald Zdrojowy; Irena Frydecka; Lidia Karabon

Polymorphisms in co-stimulatory genes are associated with susceptibility to several malignances such as breast cancer, cervical cancer and chronic lymphocytic leukemia, but have been scarcely investigated in renal cell cancer (RCC). A total of 310 RCC patients and 518 controls were genotyped for single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in the CTLA-4 and CD28 genes: CTLA-4c.49A>G (rs231775), CTLA-4g.319C>T (rs5742909), CTLA-4g.*6230G>A (CT60; rs3087243), CTLA-4g.*10223G>T (Jo31; rs11571302), CD28c.17+3T>C (rs3116496) and CD28c.-1042G>A (rs3181098). The distribution of the alleles, genotypes and haplotypes in the CTLA-4 and CD28 genes were similar in the RCC patients and in the controls. However, among the patients with a clear cell RCC (CCRCC), the G allele carriers of CT60 and Jo31 SNPs were overrepresented, and the overrepresentation became significant for the carriers of CT60[G] allele in CCRCC patients with necrosis in the primary tumor (P = 0.046). The CTLA-4c.49A>G[A]/CTLA-4g.319C>T[C]/CT60[A]/Jo31[T]/CD28c.17+3T>C[T]/ CD28c.1042G>A[G] haplotype was associated with an approximately threefold increased risk of primary tumor necrosis in CCRCC patients (P corrected = 0.0000007) and with the advanced stage of disease (IV) (P corrected = 0.001). When stratified by gender, CD28c.-1042G>A[GG] genotype was more frequent in the female CCRCC patients compared with healthy women (P = 0.042). Polymorphisms in the CTLA-4 and CD28 genes, in particular considered together as haplotypes, were associated with increased risk of CCRCC, especially with necrosis and with the advanced stage of disease. The CD28c.-1042G>A SNP modulates the risk of CCRCC in women. These findings indicate that the associations of the CTLA-4 and CD28 polymorphisms with the risk of renal cancer are worth further study in a larger group of patients.


Central European Journal of Urology 1\/2010 | 2016

Review of current optical diagnostic techniques for non-muscle-invasive bladder cancer.

Anna Kołodziej; Wojciech Krajewski; Michał Matuszewski; Krzysztof Tupikowski

Introduction Urinary bladder urothelial cell carcinoma is one of the most commonly diagnosed cancers in Europe. After prostate, lung and colon cancers, bladder cancer rates as the fourth most common cancer in men in the world. Urinary bladder cancer detection, treatment, and staging have traditionally been based on an endoscopic examination – cystoscopy. Material and methods A Medline, and Web of Science database search was performed on September 2015 without setting time limits, using the terms ‘bladder cancer’ in conjunction with ‘cystoscopy’, ‘diagnosis’, ‘detection’, ‘fluorescence’, ‘blue-light’, ‘PDD’, ‘narrow band imaging’, ‘molecular imaging’, ‘optical coherence tomography’ or ‘confocal laser endomicroscopy’. Results The new imaging techniques can be classified according to their scope as macroscopic, microscopic, and molecular. Macroscopic techniques, such as narrow band imaging, are similar to white light cystoscopy; however, they help visualize even very minute lesions in the bladder mucosa by means of contrast enhancement. Microscopic imaging techniques, such as optical coherence tomography and confocal laser endomicroscopy, provide high-resolution cross-sectional views of vesicular tissues, which resemble images obtained by histopathological examination. Therefore, these are referred as ‘optical biopsy’. Molecular imaging methods offer highly specific real-time visualization of cancer cells and their differentiation from healthy tissue, by combining optical imaging with fluorescent labeling of elements such as antibodies. Conclusions In this article we present a review of studies and literature concerning modern optical diagnostic techniques for non-muscle-invasive bladder cancer. We present available technology with its advantages and disadvantages, and studies regarding its effectiveness.


Central European Journal of Urology 1\/2010 | 2016

Urological complications after renal transplantation – a single centre experience

Wojciech Krajewski; Janusz Dembowski; Anna Kołodziej; Bartosz Małkiewicz; Krzysztof Tupikowski; Michał Matuszewski; Paweł Chudoba; M. Boratyńska; Marian Klinger; Romuald Zdrojowy

Introduction Urological complications after renal transplantation occur in between 2.5% and 30% of all graft recipients. The aim of the study was to present 7 years of experience in urological treatment of patients with a transplanted kidney. We aimed to identify retrospectively late urological complications in renal transplant recipients at a single center and analyze the treatment modalities and their outcome. Material and methods Between January 2008 and December 2014, a total of 58 patients after KTX were treated in the Department of Urology because of post-transplant urological complications that occurred during follow-up at the Transplant Outpatient Department. Retrieved data were analysed in retrospectively. Results In the group of 38 patients with ureteral stenosis (Clavien grade III), 29 patients underwent endoscopy, 8 open surgical procedures and one both endoscopic and open operation. Ten patients were admitted with symptomatic lymphocoele (Clavien III), of which 9 were successfully treated with drainage and one with surgical marsupialization. Because of urolithiasis in the grafted kidney (Clavien grade III), 4 patients were treated with ureterorenoscopic lithotripsy (URSL) and one only with the extracorporeal shock wave lithotripsy (ESWL) procedure. Five urethral strictures plasties and one graftectomy because of purulent pyelonephritis were also conducted. The average age in the group of recipients who experienced urologic complications was similar (46.1 vs. 47.8) to those without complications. There was no vesicoureteral reflux or ureteral necrosis requiring surgical intervention, no graft loss and death related to urological complication and treatment. Conclusions Most complications could be successfully treated with endourological procedures. The kidney function improved in the majority of patients.


Videosurgery and Other Miniinvasive Techniques | 2016

Patient comfort during flexible and rigid cystourethroscopy.

Wojciech Krajewski; Romuald Zdrojowy; Joanna Wojciechowska; Katarzyna Kościelska; Janusz Dembowski; Michał Matuszewski; Krzysztof Tupikowski; Bartosz Małkiewicz; Anna Kołodziej

Introduction Cystourethroscopy (CS) is an endoscopic method used to visualize the urethra and the bladder. Aim In this study, we prospectively evaluated pain in men undergoing cyclic cystoscopic assessment with rigid and flexible instruments after transurethral resection of bladder tumor (TURB). Material and methods One hundred and twenty male patients who were under surveillance after a TURB procedure due to urothelial cell carcinoma and who had undergone at least one rigid cystourethroscopy in the past were enrolled in the trial. Patients were prospectively randomized to age-matched groups for flexible (group F) or rigid (group R) CS. Patients comfort was evaluated on an 11-grade scale, ranging from 0 (free from pain) to 10 points (unbearable pain). Results The patients described the pain during the previous rigid CS as ranging from 4 to 10 (mean: 6.8) in group F and from 0 to 10 (mean: 5.8) in group R. Group R patients described the pain during the current rigid CS as ranging from 0 to 10 (mean: 5.7). No mean change in the grade was observed between the two pain descriptions (no change 11 patients, weaker pain 25 patients, stronger pain 24 patients, gamma 0.51, p < 0.0001). Group F described the pain as 1 to 5 (mean: 2.1). In the case of flexible CS the pain experience was greatly lowered compared to the previous rigid CS. All flexible CS patients reported lowered pain (by 1 to 9 grades). Patients’ age did not influence the comfort of the flexible CS or the change in pain level. Conclusions Flexible CS is better tolerated than rigid cystoscopy by male patients regardless of patients’ age.

Collaboration


Dive into the Anna Kołodziej's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Romuald Zdrojowy

Wrocław Medical University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Janusz Dembowski

Wrocław Medical University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Wojciech Krajewski

Wrocław Medical University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Tomasz Szydełko

Wrocław Medical University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Jarosław Kasprzak

Wrocław Medical University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Paweł Kowal

Wrocław Medical University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Anna Partyka

Polish Academy of Sciences

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Irena Frydecka

Wrocław Medical University

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge