PD16-03 PATIENT AND CLINICIAN PRIORITIZATION OF OUTCOMES AMONG MEN WITH ANTERIOR URETHRAL STRICTURE DISEASE Bryan B. Voelzke*, Todd C. Edwards, Donald L. Patrick, Seattle, WA; Benjamin N. Breyer, San Francisco, CA INTRODUCTION AND OBJECTIVES: Patient reported outcome measures (PROMs) are an invaluable resource that allows the patient to communicate about how they feel about their health and well- being. As these measures become more integrated into evidence- based medicine and health care delivery, a comprehensive urethral stricture-specic PROM is needed. We present research aimed to develop such a PROM. Cognitive interviews and item prioritization were performed to reduce previously generated items for development of a urethral-specic PROM. The input of clinicians was queried to compare for comparison to patient data. METHODS: We identied potential items during concept elici- tation interviews. Six domains were created based on urinary or sexual items (function, impact, symptoms/signs). Two iterative rounds of cognitive interviews were performed among a separate cohort of ve and four patients, respectively, to further test patient understanding of these items (n¼33 urinary, n¼5 sexual). Changes were made to the existing items based upon patient feedback. Item prioritization was conducted among a separate cohort of 20 patients who rated degree of bothersomeness from their urethral stricture (very much, somewhat, does not bother). Male reconstructive urologists (n¼22) also rated the items in regards to importance in making treatment decisions. RESULTS: Of the top 15 items that patients rated by bother, urinary issues predominated. There was only one sexual item (slow force of ejaculation). On average, the patient cohort was most bothered by anxiety about being unable to void, post-void dribbling, and trouble aiming their stream. There was only 53% agreement between patients and clinicians in the 15 items they independently rated as of highest importance. CONCLUSIONS: Based upon the patient-driven item prioriti- zation, we plan to create a PROM, test measurement properties, and modify our instrument, as needed, to create a patient-driven urethral stricture-specic PROM. Discord between patients and clinicians high- light the need for a stricture-specic PROM. Source of Funding: Private Donation. PD16-04 FACTORS AFFECTING FEASIBILITY OF SAME DAY ANTERIOR URETHROPLASTY Jeremy Reese*, Katherine Theisen, Vladimir Lamm, Mang Chen, Pittsburgh, PA INTRODUCTION AND OBJECTIVES: Anterior urethroplasty has historically been managed with a 1-3 day postoperative hospitali- zation. More recent literature has demonstrated the safety of same-day anastomotic and ventral onlay buccal urethroplasties. Despite these publications, reports on national trends suggest a pattern of continued admissions with an average length of stay on 2.5 days. At our tertiary care center, we routinely discharge patients on the same day following substitution and anastomotic urethroplasy. We sought to assess factors affecting feasibility of outpatient urethroplasty. METHODS: We performed a retrospective chart review of 91 consecutive anterior urethroplasty patients (11 anastomotic, 80 substi- tution) performed by a single surgeon from August 2012 through May 2015. We compared parameters of stricture length, length of stay, stricture etiology, number and type of prior stricture surgeries and stricture recurrence rates between our admitted and same day surgery groups. RESULTS: Seventy-ve of 91 (82%) patients were discharged home the day of surgery. The average length of stay for admitted pa- tients was 1.48 days (range 0.7-2.8 days). Eight of 17 admissions (47%) were planned for either patient preference or known medical comor- bidities (ex: mental illness, COPD, CKD). Of the 9 unplanned admis- sions, 5 were for pain control and/or patient anxiety, 2 for difculties with anesthesia, and 2 for extended operative times (trauma patient requiring pubectomy, scar excision and primary anastomosis; obese patient with 18cm urethral stricture). There were no signicant differences between the admission group compared to the same day group in recurrence rate (11.8% vs 10.3%, p>0.05), stricture length (5.1cm vs 4.6cm, p>0.05), age (47 vs 47 years old), number of prior stricture surgeries (1.7 vs 2.5, p>0.05), type of prior procedures, or etiology of stricture disease, respectively. 93% of the same day patients had a prior surgery compared to 88% in the admission group (p>0.05). While etiology of stricture disease was un- known in many cases, trauma was suspected in 32% of the same day group compared with 38% in the admission group (p>0.05). CONCLUSIONS: We describe the largest single surgeon series of outpatient anterior urethroplasty to date including more complex single stage panurethral substitution repairs than previously reported. No single stricture characteristic seems to determine the likelihood of outpatient surgery; rather patient preference and non-urologic comor- bidities predict the feasibility of performing same day anterior urethroplasty. Source of Funding: none PD16-05 LONG TERM RESULTS OF FEMALE URETHRAL RECONSTRUCTION USING DORSAL ONLAY LINGUAL MUCOSAL GRAFT Sameer Trivedi*, Udai Shankar Dwivedi, Sartaj Wali Khan, V S Rathee, Pushpendra Shukla, Aditya Kumar Singh, Varanasi, India INTRODUCTION AND OBJECTIVES: Urethral strictures are an uncommon cause of bladder outlet obstruction in females and are treated empirically with various modalities like dilatation and internal urethrotomy with varying outcomes. Female urethroplasty utilizing a variety of tissues (Vaginal or labial grafts/aps, oral mucosal grafts) has been described with variable degree of success in short term but long term data are lacking. In this study, we have analyzed long term results of dorsal onlay lingual mucosal graft (LMG) urethroplasty in manage- ment of female urethral stricture. Vol. 195, No. 4S, Supplement, Saturday, May 7, 2016 THE JOURNAL OF UROLOGY â e395