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Robot Prostate Surgery Shown Safe Over Long-Term |
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SciMed - Healthcare | |||
TS-Si News Service | |||
Friday, 25 March 2011 15:00 | |||
Detroit, MI, USA. Urologists and biostatisticians found that robot-assisted surgery to remove prostate glands is safe over the long term, with a major complication rate of less than one percent.
The new research analyzed the surgical outcomes of more than 3,000 consecutive patients at a single location from January 2005 to December 2009, and addressed the lack of standardized reporting that hampered previous published literature on complications of radical prostatectomy (RP). The findings follow an earlier Henry Ford study that found nearly 87 percent of patients whose prostates were removed by robot-assisted surgery. The surgery was performed on cancer patients who their had no recurrence of the disease after five years, demonstrating the general efficacy of the procedure using a standard survival metric. Assessing Robot-assisted Radical Prostatectomy Henry Ford Hospital pioneered the use of robot-assisted radical prostatectomy (RARP) to assist surgeons in the delicate procedure. Surgeons performed the work at the Vattikuti Urology Institute (VUI) at the Henry Ford Hospital in Detroit, Michigan. The new study notes that RARP is now the most common technique in the U.S. for treating localized prostate cancer. The findings appear in the journal European Urology. "We have always felt that robotic surgery for prostate cancer was safe, but there have been no studies that have looked at long-term safety. This is why the Henry Ford study is so important," says Mani Menon, M.D., director of the Institute.In RP, the entire diseased prostate gland and some surrounding tissue are surgically removed, in hopes of preventing the cancer from spreading to other parts of the body. The Henry Ford researchers found only one previous report on complications of RP that had adhered to uniform surgical reporting standards. However that study looked at open and laparoscopic prostatectomy, and did not include robot-assisted RP. Confronted, in a sense, by "apples and oranges" comparisons of several RP surgical techniques, the Henry Ford researchers set out to produce a five-year safety study that both concentrated on RARP and incorporated an exhaustive collection of data, covering everything from length of hospital stay, to an in-depth examination of other diseases afflicting the patients, but unrelated to their cancers. Among the study group of 3,317 RARP patients, researchers found a median hospitalization time of only one day. There were 368 complications in 326 of the patients – or 9.8 percent of the total – most of which were minor and occurred within 30 days of the surgery. A patient's prostate-specific antigen (PSA) scores before surgery, as well as cardiac disease, were found to predict medical complications after the robot-assisted surgery; age, gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD), and biopsy score predicted possible surgical complications. The researchers' main conclusion was that "RARP is a safe operation." Henry Ford's robot-assisted urology program uses a surgeon-controlled robot, the da Vinci minimally invasive surgery system. It enables surgeons to manipulate robotic arms for precise procedures through a series of small incisions, instead of the large wounds required by traditional "open" surgery, and provides 3-D monitoring for the entire surgical team. The potential benefits for the patient include shorter recovery times, less trauma, and reduced hospitalization costs. It is also the basis of a "nerve-sparing" procedure called the Veil of Aphrodite, developed at Ford, to minimize the erectile dysfunction common in men after undergoing traditional radical prostatectomy. "While these results provide strong endorsement for robotic surgery, we want to emphasize that the results are dependent more on the surgical team that controls the da Vinci robot rather than just the robot," Dr. Menon states. CitationThe Vattikuti Urology Institute (VUI) funded this study.
CitationSafety Profile of Robot-Assisted Radical Prostatectomy: A Standardized Report of Complications in Patients. Piyush K. Agarwal, Jesse Sammon, Akshay Bhandari, Ali Dabaja, Mireya Diaz, Stacey Dusik-Fenton, Ramgopal Satyanarayana, Andrea Simone, Quoc-Dien Trinh, Brad Baize, Mani Menon. European Urology 2011; ePub ahead of print. doi:10.1016/S1569-9056(11)60449-1
Download PDF Abstract Objective. To document complications after RARP by strict application of standardized reporting criteria. Design, setting, and participants. Between January 2005 and December 2009, 3317 consecutive patients underwent RARP at a tertiary referral center. Median follow-up was 24.2 mo (interquartile range: 12.4–36.9). Intervention. Transperitoneal RARP was performed by one of five surgeons — two experienced, three beginners. Measurements. Complications were captured by exhaustive review of multiple datasets, including our prospective prostate cancer database, claims data, and electronic medical and institutional morbidity and mortality records, and reported according to the Martin–Donat criteria. Complications were stratified by type (medical/surgical), Clavien classification, and timing of onset. Multivariable analysis of factors predictive of complications was performed. Results and limitations. The median hospitalization time was 1 d. There were 368 complications in 326 patients (9.8%), including a transfusion rate of 2.2%. We detected 79 medical complications in 78 patients (2.4%) and 289 surgical complications in 264 patients (8.0%). There were 242 minor (Clavien 1–2) and 126 major (Clavien 3–5) complications. Two hundred ninety-nine (81.3%) complications occurred within 30 d, 17 (4.6%) within 31–90 d, and 52 (14.1%) after 90 d from surgery. On multivariable analysis, preoperative prostate-specific antigen values and cardiac comorbidity were predictive for medical complications, whereas age, gastroesophageal reflux disease, and biopsy Gleason score were predictive of surgical complications. Limitations of this study include representing results from a single high-volume referral center and not including the learning curve of the two most experienced surgeons. Conclusions. RARP is a safe operation, with an overall complication rate of 9.8%. Most complications occurred within 30 d of surgery. Take Home Message In patients who were followed up to 5 yr, robot-assisted radical prostatectomy was a safe operation, with a median hospitalization time of 1 d and complication, imperative transfusion, and reoperation rates of 9.8%, 0.4%, and 1.4%, respectively. On multivariable analysis of preoperative patient characteristics, age, preoperative prostate-specific antigen value, biopsy Gleason score, and cardiac and gastrointestinal comorbidities were independently predictive of complications. Keywords: prostatectomy, robotic, rarp, complications.
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Last Updated on Friday, 25 March 2011 13:09 |