Researchers examined data on men with localized prostate cancer who
had an operation known as a radical prostatectomy. These included
1,310 men who had minimally invasive robot-assisted procedures, 427
who had other minimally invasive operations and 422 who had surgery
involving an incision through the abdominal wall.
When researchers surveyed men 18 months after their operations,
there were no meaningful differences among the groups in how often
patients reported problems with sexual function, urinary
incontinence or bowel movements.
The type of surgery also didn’t appear to influence quality of life,
researchers report in the British Journal of Cancer.
The results suggest that men shouldn’t be making surgery decisions
based solely on whether the procedures will be done using robots,
said lead study author Dr. Julie Nossiter of the London School of
Hygiene and Tropical Medicine.
“The expertise and skill of an individual surgeon, and comparative
performance of a surgical center should drive treatment decisions,”
Nossiter said by email.
Many men with early-stage prostate cancer may not need treatment
right away, or ever, because these tumors often don’t grow fast
enough to cause symptoms or prove fatal. Treatment can have
after-effects such as impotence and incontinence.
In the absence of symptoms or tests that suggest tumors are growing
quickly, doctors may advise men to put off immediate treatment and
instead get regular screenings to reassess whether the cancer is
dangerous enough to warrant intervention.
When men do opt for treatment, they may receive radiation or
surgery. A growing number of men are opting for surgeries with
high-tech robots, particularly in the UK where surgical centers
catering to robotic procedures are increasingly luring patients away
from local hospitals, according to another recent study (http://bit.ly/2og6767).
Some previous research has also linked robotic surgery to lower
blood loss and shorter hospital stays than other prostate
operations, Nossiter said.
Surgical options include what’s known as keyhole surgery, which
involves making a number of small holes in the abdomen that allow
the surgeon to insert cameras and instruments. This can be done with
a surgeon holding and controlling the instruments or with a robot
controlling the surgical tools.
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Another surgical option is what’s known as open surgery, which
involves a large cut in the abdominal wall.
Following each of these surgical options, 27 to 30 percent of men in
the study reported urinary incontinence, 12 percent reported painful
urination and 11 to 12 percent reported bowel problems.
About 21 to 25 percent of men also reported sexual dysfunction. The
degree of sexual dysfunction experienced by men who had robotic
surgery was very slightly lower compared to the others, but not
enough to make a clinical difference, the authors note.
The study wasn’t a controlled experiment designed to prove whether
or how the type of prostate surgery might influence the risk of
after effects. It also didn’t look at how well the different options
worked at the main goal of surgery - curing cancer.
Even so, the results suggest that robotic surgery may not always be
the best choice, said Dr. Sarmad Sadeghi, a researcher at the
University of Southern California’s Norris Comprehensive Cancer
Center in Los Angeles.
“This paper illustrates that despite the many appeals of robotic
surgery, the outcomes, at least the functional outcomes looked at
here, are not significantly superior,” Sadeghi, who wasn’t involved
in the study, said by email. “This raises the question whether it is
necessary to use a more complex and expensive technology to perform
these surgeries.”
For many men, especially relatively healthy patients with cancer
that hasn’t spread beyond the prostate, surgery might not be
necessary at all, noted Dr. Kalipso Chalkidou, a researcher at
Imperial College London who wasn’t involved in the study.
“Newer is not always better,” Chalkidou said by email. “What drives
technology diffusion in healthcare is not always improved outcomes.”
SOURCE: http://go.nature.com/2oohPeb British Journal of Cancer,
online January 18, 2018.
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