Abstract

Due to the large number of men affected and a variable clinical presentation, the widespread disease "benign prostatic syndrome" requires individual treatment options tailored to the patient's specific clinical characteristics and wishes. If surgical treatment is indicated, there is a wide range of invasive procedures available. For a long time, transurethral resection of the prostate and simple prostatectomy were considered the gold standard, but these procedures are associated with increased morbidity and limitations in sexual function. Therefore, there is now an increasing call for minimally invasive treatment options that will provide effective and safe treatment in the outpatient setting. Over the past years, a variety of technologies and procedures have been developed and tested, but only a few of them have found their way into clinical practice, mostly due to insufficient functional results. For instance, transurethral needle ablation, transurethral microwave thermotherapy, intraprostatic botulinum toxin A or PRX302 injections as well as prostatic stents are no longer recommended. In contrast, the European Association of Urology is currently recommending UroLift, Aquablation and prostatic artery embolisation, which achieve significant long-term improvements in functional parameters while providing a good safety profile and preserved sexual function. Promising data are also available for the temporarily implanted nitinol device (iTIND), Rezūm, intraprostatic injection of fexapotide triflutate and transperineal laser ablation of the prostate, but the efficacy and safety of these procedures need to be confirmed in further studies.

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