| Literature DB >> 23675138 |
John R Carlucci1, Fatima Nabizada-Pace, David B Samadi.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Robotic prostatectomy techniques are evolving rapidly as the procedure gains popularity and continues to be compared to the gold standard of open retropubic radical prostatectomy. Our objective is to report the operative technique and outcomes of 700 consecutive robotic radical prostatectomies performed by a single surgeon at Mount Sinai Medical Center between May 2007 and October 2008. Data was prospectively collected in an Internal Review Board (IRB)-approved database. SURGICAL PROCEDURE: Key aspects of our technique include 1) dissection of the bladder neck first; 2) minimal to no use of cautery from posterior bladder neck dissection onward; 3) leaving endopelvic fascia intact until after neurovascular bundles dissected; 4) preservation of a wide margin of endopelvic fascia; 5) posterior dissection and nerve-sparing in a medial to lateral direction; 6) cold transection of the dorsal venous complex without prior ligation; and 7) posterior bladder neck reconstruction.Entities:
Keywords: DaVinci prostatectomy; prostate cancer; radical prostatectomy; robotic prostatectomy
Year: 2009 PMID: 23675138 PMCID: PMC3614793
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Biomed Sci ISSN: 1550-9702
Patient Demographics
| Mean Age (years) | 59 (40–78) |
| Mean BMI | 27.5 (19–46.9) |
| Mean PSA | 6.0 (0.4–50) |
| Median Gleason score | 6 |
| Gleason score (%) | |
| 6 | 62 |
| 7 | 31 |
| 8 | 6 |
| 9 | 1 |
| Prior abdominal surgery (%) | 24 |
| Hernia repair | 49.7 |
| Appendectomy | 32.1 |
| Cholecystectomy | 9.3 |
| Other | 8.8 |
| Prior transurethral prostate surgery | 1.6 |
| TURP | 1.0 |
| TUNA | 0.3 |
| Laser ablation | 0.3 |
Figure 1Photographs of selected steps of our robotic prostatectomy technique. (a) Dissection of the space of Retzius using the Maryland bipolar forceps in the left hand and the cautery hook in the right. The bladder can be seen in the bottom portion of the picture beneath the bipolar forceps; (b) The prostate has been cleared of its fatty covering and the anterior bladder neck (being held by the bipolar forceps) is about to be opened with the cautery hook; (c) After the anterior bladder neck has been opened, the Foley catheter is pulled anteriorly with the fourth arm (ProGrasp forceps, not shown in photo), giving exposure to the lateral and posterior portions of the bladder neck; (d) With the prostate lifted anteriorly with the fourth arm, the Denonvillier's fascia is grasped with the bipolar forceps and cut with the cold scissors (bladder neck seen in foreground); (e) The pearlywhite tissue that is characteristic of the plane of tissue between the layers of Denonvillier's fascia is shown here; (f) The neurovascular bundle is gently dissected off the poserolateral surface of the prostate, shown here on the left side (prostate is being held up by left hand bipolar forceps); (g) The endopelvic fascia is opened towards the apex along the contour of the prostate; (h) The dorsal venous complex is divided with the pneumoperitoneum raised to 20 mm Hg; (i) The apex of the prostate is shown here with the urethra skeletonized and about to be divided close the prostate to preserve maximum urethral length.
Intraoperative Data
| Mean operative time (min) | 124 (48–266) |
| Mean robotic time (min) | 88 (36–190) |
| Mean estimated blood loss (mL) | 69.3 (5–400) |
| Conversion rate (%) | 0 |
| Blood transfusion rate (%) | 0 |
| Intraoperative complications | 1 |
Oncologic Results
| Prostate weight | 53 (22–200) |
| Pathologic Stage (%) | |
| T2a | 11.0 |
| T2b | 1.25 |
| T2c | 70.0 |
| T3a | 11.4 |
| T3b | 4.7 |
| T4 | 0 |
| Median Postoperative Gleason score | 7 |
| Postoperative Gleason score (%) | |
| 6 | 33.9 |
| 7 | 60.2 |
| 8 | 2.8 |
| 9 | 3.12 |
| Positive surgical margins by location (% of total positive margins) | |
| Apical | 10.3 |
| Base | 11.8 |
| Anterior | 8.8 |
| Posterior | 45.6 |
| Lateral | 11.8 |
| Seminal vesicle | 10.3 |
| Urethra | 1.5 |
| Positive surgical margin rate by stage (%) | |
| pT2a | 1.4 |
| pT2b | 0 |
| pT2c | 8.3 |
| pT3a | 39.7 |
| pT3b | 56.7 |
| Overall positive surgical margin rate (%) | 11.9 |
| Biochemical recurrence rate (%) | 1.7 |
Perioperative and Postoperative Complications (number of complications)
| Pulmonary embolus | 3 |
| DVT | 2 |
| Urinary retention | 4 |
| Port site hernia | 1 |
| Ileus | 2 |
| Bowel obstruction | 1 |
| Small bowel injury | 1 |
| Rectal injury | 0 |
| Lymphocele | 1 |
| Prolonged hematuria | 3 |
| Epididymo-orchitis | 1 |
| Pelvic hematoma requiring transfusion | 1 |
| JP site bleeding (requiring transfusion) | 1 |
| Pelvic collection | 4 |
| Bladder neck contracture | 1 |
| Wound infection | 1 |
| Anastomotic leak | 1 |
| Overall complication rate (%) | 3.3 |
Figure 2Postoperative continence rates (percentage of patients with 0–1 security pad per day) at demonstrated intervals up to one year.
Figure 3Postoperative potency rates (percentage of patients with SHIM score >21 or ability to have intercourse) at demonstrated intervals up to one year.
Summary of continence and potency outcomes at one year for selected series reported in the literature
| Author | Continence (≤1 pad/day) (%) | Potency (%) |
|---|---|---|
| Menon | 95.2 | 70 |
| Joseph | 96 | 70 |
| Patel | 95 | 78 |
| Zorn | 90.2 | 80 |
| Badani | 93 | 79.2 |
| Mottrie | 95 | 70 |
| Murphy | 91.4 | 64 |