Robotic prostate surgery comes with
trade-off |
Study: Increasingly used procedure tied to lasting incontinence,
impotence
CHICAGO - A new study suggests less-invasive keyhole surgery for
prostate cancer may mean a higher risk for lasting incontinence and
impotence when compared with traditional surgery.
The results add to confusion around prostate cancer treatments, which
sometimes lead to urinary and sexual problems. It's not clear that
either kind of surgery is superior to radiation alone or watchful
waiting, which means simply monitoring the prostate for changes.
Laparoscopic, or keyhole, surgery is increasingly chosen by men having a
cancerous prostate removed. And often it involves the highly marketed da
Vinci robotics system. Da Vinci's popularity has been rising even though
there's never been a rigorous head-to-head comparison between it and
standard surgery.
"There's been a rapid adoption of this relatively new technique," said
the study's lead author Dr. Jim Hu of Brigham and Women's Hospital in
Boston.
For the study, appearing in Wednesday's Journal of the American Medical
Association, researchers analyzed Medicare data for nearly 9,000
prostate cancer patients who had surgical treatment from 2003-07. Of
those, 1,938 patients had minimally invasive surgery and 6,899 patients
had standard surgery. The data did not indicate how many of the less
invasive cases involved robotics.
The patients who had keyhole surgery left the hospital in two days,
rather than three, on average. They also had lower rates of blood
transfusions, breathing problems and internal scarring.
There was no difference in the rate of additional cancer therapy down
the road, suggesting the two techniques were about the same for cancer
control.
More likely to report complications But the men who had keyhole surgery
were more likely to report complications in the first 30 days after
surgery involving genital and urinary function. About 5 percent of the
minimally
invasive surgery patients vs. about 2 percent of the standard surgery
patients had these complications. And after 18 months, they had more
incontinence and erectile dysfunction.
"The take-home message for men is they need to dig deeper than simply
the message they might be getting from planted stories from device
manufacturers or radio ads or billboards," Hu said.
In laparoscopic surgery, small incisions are made and the doctor uses a
tiny camera and instruments for the operation. When robotics is used for
this, the doctor sits at a console and manipulates similar instruments
attached to robotic arms that work on the patient.
From 2001-06, use of the da Vinci system — the only robot available for
this operation — rose from 1 percent to 40 percent of all radical
prostatectomies. During that time, the stock price of da Vinci's maker,
Sunnyvale, Calif.-based Intuitive Surgical Inc., increased 11-fold.
To compete for patients, more hospitals are buying robotic systems and
advertising faster recovery times. More doctors are taking the two-day
training to learn Intuitive's da Vinci Surgical System.
But many doctors perform too few robot-assisted surgeries to get good at
it, Hu said, and that could explain the lasting problems that showed up
in the study. Previous research has shown doctors who perform the most
surgeries get the best results.
Hu had his own learning curve. He's now done more than 700 robotic
prostate surgeries, but "it took several hundred cases before I thought
I was doing really well in preserving erectile function and continence,"
he said.
Robotic surgery vs. traditional surgery Dr. Steve Freedland of Duke
University School of Medicine in Durham, N.C., said he doubts the
findings will dampen the enthusiasm for robotic surgery — he termed it
"mass hysteria over new technology" — because surgeons will claim
better-than-average results when they talk to men considering their
options.
Freedland, who does prostate surgery, said the results just reinforce
his decision to stick with traditional, open surgery.
"One of the reasons why health care in this country is extremely
expensive is because it's assumed that what's newest must be best,"
Freedland said.
The researchers found that the less-invasive surgery was more popular
among more affluent, highly educated men. So it might be that those
patients are more likely to seek help for urinary and sexual problems
compared to men who had traditional surgery, said Dr. Ashutosh Tewari,
director of the Prostate Cancer Institute at NewYork-Presbyterian
Hospital/Weill Cornell Medical Center.
Tewari, who receives research funding from Intuitive Surgical and had no
role in the study, faulted the research for lumping all minimally
invasive surgeries together, both robotic and those using older
laparoscopic techniques.
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