TY - JOUR
T1 - The CAMUS Initiative
T2 - A Multiphase, Multicentre International Collaboration to Redefine Risk Stratification, Reporting, and Grading of Surgical Complications in Urology
AU - The CAMUS Study Group Collaborators are listed in the Supplementary material
AU - Soliman, Christopher
AU - Sathianathen, Niranjan J.
AU - Corcoran, Niall M.
AU - Lawrentschuk, Nathan
AU - Wuethrich, Patrick Y.
AU - Furrer, Marc A.
AU - Ali, Furat Abd
AU - Shah Bin Abd Karim, Muhammad Fairuz
AU - Abouelenein, Mohamed
AU - Ghanem, Yasmin Abu
AU - Adam, Ahmed
AU - Adami, Alessandro
AU - Adamos, Konstantinos
AU - Adamou, Constantinos
AU - Adeyeye, Ademola
AU - Aellen, Florian
AU - Afferi, Luca
AU - Agarwal, Abhishek
AU - Agarwal, Dinesh K.
AU - Agarwal, Vandana
AU - Agostini, Edoardo
AU - Agrawal, Mayank
AU - Agüera Sánchez, María Ángela
AU - Ahmad, Sarfraz
AU - Ahour, Rawdy Talaat
AU - Akbarov, Ilgar
AU - Akbas, Samira
AU - Akdogan, Nebil
AU - Aksaray, Eren Erdi
AU - Al-Bermani, Osama
AU - Al-Monajjed, Rouvier
AU - Al-Rammahi, Dheaa
AU - Albala, David M.
AU - Albers, Peter
AU - Albertsen, Peter C.
AU - Albuheissi, Salah
AU - Ali, Hassan Aina
AU - Ibrahim Ali Mohsen, Mohamed Ali
AU - Almarzouq, Ahmad
AU - Altaylouni, Turki
AU - Ambulkar, Reshma
AU - Amend, Bastian
AU - Ameye, Filip
AU - Amparore, Daniele
AU - Anastasiyeuskaya, Yuliya
AU - Anceschi, Umberto
AU - Anderson, Elliot
AU - Anderson, Paul D.
AU - Angsurak, Chawat
AU - Kyei, Mathew Yamoah
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2026 The Author(s)
PY - 2026/5
Y1 - 2026/5
N2 - Surgical complications remain a major source of preventable morbidity, mortality, and health care expenditure, but existing frameworks such as the Clavien-Dindo classification and Comprehensive Complication Index are clinician-centred and intervention-focused and fail to capture cumulative patient-centred outcomes. This protocol outlines the Complications After Major and Minor Urological Surgery (CAMUS) initiative, a global, multiphase effort to redefine complication reporting, risk stratification, and outcome measurement in urological surgery. CAMUS aims to address these limitations via an integrated, seven-arm programme combining retrospective and prospective data analysis, consensus development, and digital infrastructure design. Arm 1 has assembled a retrospective data set of 130 034 major urological procedures from 180 centres across 33 countries, the largest of its kind. Arms 2 and 3 have completed Delphi surveys with physicians (n = 1113) and pilot nursing participants (n = 20) and has generated consensus on novel grading domains and highlighted the importance of multidisciplinary perspectives. Arm 4 will incorporate patient-reported outcomes and behavioural economics methods to quantify subjective burdens, while arm 5 will develop the CAMUS Intraoperative and Postoperative Risk and Difficulty Estimation Index (IPRADES) for surgical risk and difficulty prediction. Arms 6 and 7 will build a secure e-database and dictionary and prospectively validate the system using >2000 new cases. Statistical methods include multivariable regression, meta-analysis of individual patient data, and machine-learning approaches to model predictors of morbidity and mortality. Outputs will be benchmarked internationally to facilitate both clinician- and patient-driven definitions of complication severity. Ultimately, CAMUS will deliver a reproducible, patient-inclusive classification system with broad applicability to clinical practice, audits, education, and policy. By integrating more than 130 000 procedures with global Delphi consensus, CAMUS represents the most comprehensive complication classification initiative undertaken in surgery. Its outputs are expected to improve transparency, standardise reporting, and inform patient-centred risk stratification worldwide.
AB - Surgical complications remain a major source of preventable morbidity, mortality, and health care expenditure, but existing frameworks such as the Clavien-Dindo classification and Comprehensive Complication Index are clinician-centred and intervention-focused and fail to capture cumulative patient-centred outcomes. This protocol outlines the Complications After Major and Minor Urological Surgery (CAMUS) initiative, a global, multiphase effort to redefine complication reporting, risk stratification, and outcome measurement in urological surgery. CAMUS aims to address these limitations via an integrated, seven-arm programme combining retrospective and prospective data analysis, consensus development, and digital infrastructure design. Arm 1 has assembled a retrospective data set of 130 034 major urological procedures from 180 centres across 33 countries, the largest of its kind. Arms 2 and 3 have completed Delphi surveys with physicians (n = 1113) and pilot nursing participants (n = 20) and has generated consensus on novel grading domains and highlighted the importance of multidisciplinary perspectives. Arm 4 will incorporate patient-reported outcomes and behavioural economics methods to quantify subjective burdens, while arm 5 will develop the CAMUS Intraoperative and Postoperative Risk and Difficulty Estimation Index (IPRADES) for surgical risk and difficulty prediction. Arms 6 and 7 will build a secure e-database and dictionary and prospectively validate the system using >2000 new cases. Statistical methods include multivariable regression, meta-analysis of individual patient data, and machine-learning approaches to model predictors of morbidity and mortality. Outputs will be benchmarked internationally to facilitate both clinician- and patient-driven definitions of complication severity. Ultimately, CAMUS will deliver a reproducible, patient-inclusive classification system with broad applicability to clinical practice, audits, education, and policy. By integrating more than 130 000 procedures with global Delphi consensus, CAMUS represents the most comprehensive complication classification initiative undertaken in surgery. Its outputs are expected to improve transparency, standardise reporting, and inform patient-centred risk stratification worldwide.
KW - Complication reporting
KW - Delphi method
KW - Risk estimation
KW - Surgical difficulty
KW - Urological surgery
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105034928791
U2 - 10.1016/j.euros.2026.01.012
DO - 10.1016/j.euros.2026.01.012
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:105034928791
SN - 2666-1691
VL - 87
SP - 57
EP - 70
JO - European Urology Open Science
JF - European Urology Open Science
ER -