| Literature DB >> 17931513 |
Ralph Madeb1, Dragan Golijanin, Joy Knopf, Ivelisse Vicente, Erdal Erturk, Hitendra R H Patel, Jean V Joseph.
Abstract
BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: Erectile function after prostate surgery is an important criterion for patients when they are choosing a treatment modality for prostate cancer. Improved visualization, dexterity, and precision afforded by the da Vinci robot allow a precise dissection of the neurovascular bundles. We objectively assessed erectile function after robot-assisted extraperitoneal prostatectomy by using the SHIM (IIEF-5) validated questionnaire.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2007 PMID: 17931513 PMCID: PMC3015835
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JSLS ISSN: 1086-8089 Impact factor: 2.172
Clinical Parameters and Intraoperative Data of 150 Patients Undergoing Extraperitoneal Robot-Assisted Nerve-Sparing Radical Prostatectomy at Our Institution
| Parameter | Mean (Range) |
|---|---|
| Age | 60 (46–76) |
| Pre-op PSA | 6.6 (0.6–26) |
| Clinical Stage | |
| T1c | 126 |
| T2a | 22 |
| T2b | 2 |
| Gleason Score | 6 (4–8) |
| Operative time (including docking) | 223 (163–486) minutes |
| Blood Loss | 196 mL |
| Nerve Sparing | 117 |
| Unilateral | 24 |
| Bilateral | 93 |
Erectile Function by Nerve-Sparing Status
| IIEF-5 Score | Class of Erectile Dysfunction | Nonnerve Sparing | Unilateral Nerve Sparing | Bilateral Nerve Sparing |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| <11 | Impotent | 4 | 3 | 15 |
| 11–15 | Moderate | - | 1 | 2 |
| 16–21 | Mild | - | - | 12 |
| 22–25 | Potent | - | 2 | 16 |
| Total Patients | - | 4 | 6 | 45 |
Reported Potency Rates and Method of Prostatectomy
| Series | Type of Prostatectomy | No. of Patients in Series | Laterality | Potency Rate |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Walsh et al[ | Open | 64 | Bilateral | 73% |
| Catalona et al[ | Open | 798 | Bilateral | 68% |
| 60 | Unilateral | 47% | ||
| Gralnek et al[ | Open | 46 | Unilateral | 39% |
| Rabbani et al[ | Open | 181 | Bilateral | 47% |
| 26+107 | Unilateral | 25% | ||
| Quinlan et al[ | Open | 291 | Bilateral | 82% |
| 96+109 | Unilateral | 58% | ||
| Geary et al[ | Open | 69 | Bilateral | 32% |
| 203 | Unilateral | 15% | ||
| Fowler et al[ | Open | Unknown | Unknown | 11% |
| Turk et al[ | Laparoscopic | 44 | Unilateral/Bilateral | 59% |
| Rassweiler et al[ | Laparoscopic | 10 | Unilateral | 40% |
| Bollens et al[ | Laparoscopic | 10 | Bilateral | 60% |
| Guillonneau et al[ | Laparoscopic | 20 | Bilateral | 45% |
| Roumeguere et al[ | Laparoscopic | 26 | Bilateral | 65% |
| Touijer et al[ | Laparoscopic | 47 | Bilateral | 66% |
| Katz et al[ | Laparoscopic | 143 | Unilateral/Bilateral | 58% |
| Menon et al[ | Robotic | 1100 | Unilateral/Bilateral | 64% |
| Ahlering et al[ | Robotic | 51 | Unilateral/Bilateral | 47% |
| Chien et al34 | Robotic | 56 | Unilateral/Bilateral | 69% |
| Menon et al[ | Robotic | 23 | Bilateral (conventional) | 74% |
| 35 | Bilateral (fascia sparing) | 97% | ||
| Kaul et al[ | Robotic | 154 | Bilateral (fascia sparing) | 71% |
Denotes unilateral resection and unilateral/bilateral damage, respectively.
Denotes inclusion of unilateral preservation with the contralateral nerve being partially excised or widely excised.
Denotes a subset of the entire group analyzed.