Abstract

We assessed whether the severity of anastomotic urinary leakage detected during routine cystourethrography after robot-assisted laparoscopic prostatectomy (RALP) affects urinary continence recovery. Around 302 patients who underwent RALP between August 2013 and May 2019 were included retrospectively. According to routine cystourethrographic findings obtained on the sixth or eighth postoperative day, which indicated leakage severity, patients were divided into three groups: no-leakage, grade 1 (linear shaped leakage, but not spreading), and grade 2 (spreading strip-shaped leakage). The preoperative factors and intraoperative factors were compared between no-leakage and leakage group (grade 1 and grade 2). Continence recovery was compared between the three groups. Continence recovery was defined as no pad used or one security pad used in a day. Cystourethrography revealed anastomotic urinary leakage in 44 patients (14.5%), of which 20 patients (6.6%) had grade 1 leakage and 24 patients (7.9%) had grade 2 leakage. On multivariate logistic regression analysis, the only significant predictor for urethrovesical anastomotic urinary leakage on cystourethrography following RALP was intraoperative anastomotic leakage (OR 5.306; 95% CI 1.530-18.398, p = 0.009). Continence recovery rates for no-leakage, grade 1 leakage, and grade 2 leakage groups were 11%, 20%, and 25% after 1month (P = 0.131); 25%, 25%, and 45.8% after 3months (P = 0.474); 44.6%, 55%, and 60.8% after 6months (P = 0.184); and 63.1%, 87.5%, and 78.2% after 12months (P = 0.095), respectively. In conclusion, urinary leakage in urethrovesical anastomosis, even at its severity, had no negative effects on continence recovery after RALP.

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