Abstract

BackgroundThe pathological and oncological outcomes of retro-pubic radical prostatectomy (RRP) and robot-assisted radical prostatectomy (RARP) have not been sufficiently investigated.MethodsTreatment-naïve patients with localized prostate cancer (PC) (n = 908; RRP, n = 490; and RARP, n = 418) were enrolled in the study. The clinicopathological outcomes, rate and localization of the positive surgical margin (PSM), localization of PSM, and biochemical recurrence (BCR)-free survival groups were compared between RRP and RARP.ResultsThe median patient age and serum PSA level (ng/mL) at diagnosis were 67 years and 7.9 ng/ml, respectively, for RRP, and 67 years and 7.6 ng/ml, respectively, for RARP. The overall PSM rate with RARP was 21%, which was 11% for pT2a, 12% for pT2b, 9.8% for pT2c, 43% for pT3a, 55% for pT3b, and 0% for pT4. The overall PSM rate with RRP was 44%, which was 12% for pT2a, 18% for pT2b, 43% for pT2c, 78% for pT3a, 50% for pT3b, and 40% for pT4. The PSM rate was significantly lower for RARP in men with pT2c and pT3a (p < 0.0001 for both). Multivariate analysis showed that RARP reduced the risk of BCR (hazard ratio; 0.6, p = 0.009).ConclusionsRARP versus RRP is associated with an improved PSM rate and BCR. To examine the cancer-specific survival, further investigations are needed.

Highlights

  • The pathological and oncological outcomes of retro-pubic radical prostatectomy (RRP) and robot-assisted radical prostatectomy (RARP) have not been sufficiently investigated

  • Robot-assisted radical prostatectomy (RARP) is widely used to treat localized prostate cancer (PC) [1]; there have been no large randomized controlled trials demonstrating its superiority over retro-pubic radical prostatectomy (RRP) [2, 3]

  • A recently conducted randomized controlled study that was conducted on 326 patients with localized PC, allocated to RARP or RRP, did not show the advantage of RARP over RRP [4]

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Summary

Introduction

The pathological and oncological outcomes of retro-pubic radical prostatectomy (RRP) and robot-assisted radical prostatectomy (RARP) have not been sufficiently investigated. Robot-assisted radical prostatectomy (RARP) is widely used to treat localized prostate cancer (PC) [1]; there have been no large randomized controlled trials demonstrating its superiority over retro-pubic radical prostatectomy (RRP) [2, 3]. A recently conducted randomized controlled study that was conducted on 326 patients with localized PC, allocated to RARP or RRP, did not show the advantage of RARP over RRP [4]. We introduced the mentoring program during RARP, keeping the balance between surgical outcomes and surgeon education [9]. We present the pathological and oncological outcomes, including localization of PSM, in men undergoing RRP and RARP at our institution.

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