Abstract

AimsRadical prostatectomy for prostate cancer is frequently complicated by urinary incontinence and erectile dysfunction. Nerve‐sparing surgery reduces the risk of postoperative complications and can be optimised by the use of intraoperative frozen sections of the adjacent neurovascular structure (NeuroSAFE). The aims of this study were to evaluate the pathological outcomes of the NeuroSAFE technique and to develop a comprehensive algorithm for intraoperative clinical decision‐making.Methods and resultsBetween September 2018 and May 2019, 491 NeuroSAFE procedures were performed in 258 patients undergoing radical prostatectomy; 74 of 491 (15.1%) NeuroSAFE specimens had positive surgical margins. As compared with the corresponding paraffin sections, NeuroSAFE had a positive predictive value and negative predictive value of 85.1% and 95.4%, respectively. In 72.2% of secondary neurovascular bundle resections prompted by a NeuroSAFE positive surgical margin, no tumour was present. These cases more often had a positive surgical margin of ≤1 mm (48.7% versus 20.0%; P = 0.001) and only one positive slide (69.2% versus 33.3%; P = 0.008). None of the nine patients with Gleason pattern 3 at the surgical margin, a positive surgical margin length of ≤1 mm and one positive slide had tumour in the secondary resection.ConclusionsThis study provides a systematic reporting template for pathological intraoperative NeuroSAFE evaluation, supporting intraoperative clinical decision‐making and comparison between prostate cancer operation centres.

Highlights

  • Radical prostatectomy (RP) is one of the main treatment modalities for men with localized prostate cancer

  • Between September 2018 and May 2019, 491 NeuroSAFE procedures were performed in 258 patients undergoing radical prostatectomy; 74/491 (15.1%) NeuroSAFEs had a positive surgical margin

  • This study provides a systematic reporting template for pathological intraoperative NeuroSAFE evaluation, supporting intraoperative clinical decision-making and comparison between prostate cancer operation centres

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Summary

Introduction

Radical prostatectomy (RP) is one of the main treatment modalities for men with localized prostate cancer. Standardized intraoperative frozen section (IFS) assessment of surgical margins during RP according to the NeuroSAFE technique has shown to significantly increase nerve-sparing surgery without negatively affecting oncological outcome [9, 13,14,15]. For this purpose, urologists initially perform a bilateral nerve-sparing RP, after which prostate tissue adjacent to the neurovascular bundles, which are still in situ, is removed from the specimen and submitted for detailed pathological intraoperative evaluation. This time is comparable with that of Beyer et al who reported an average NeuroSAFE pathology time of 35 minutes in more than 1000 patients, indicating optimization is still possible at larger numbers of procedures [14]

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