| Literature DB >> 34322516 |
Arnas Rakauskas1, Giancarlo Marra2, Isabel Heidegger3, Veeru Kasivisvanathan4,5, Alexander Kretschmer6, Fabio Zattoni7, Felix Preisser8, Derya Tilki9,10, Igor Tsaur11, Roderick van den Bergh12, Claudia Kesch13, Francesco Ceci14, Christian Fankhauser15, Giorgio Gandaglia16, Massimo Valerio1.
Abstract
Focal therapy is a modern alternative to selectively treat a specific part of the prostate harboring clinically significant disease while preserving the rest of the gland. The aim of this therapeutic approach is to retain the oncological benefit of active treatment and to minimize the side-effects of common radical treatments. The oncological effectiveness of focal therapy is yet to be proven in long-term robust trials. In contrast, the toxicity profile is well-established in randomized controlled trials and multiple robust prospective cohort studies. This narrative review summarizes the relevant evidence on complications and their management after focal therapy. When compared to whole gland treatments, focal therapy provides a substantial benefit in terms of adverse events reduction and preservation of genito-urinary function. The most common complications occur in the peri-operative period. Urinary tract infection and acute urinary retention can occur in up to 17% of patients, while dysuria and haematuria are more common. Urinary incontinence following focal therapy is very rare (0-5%), and the vast majority of patients recover in few weeks. Erectile dysfunction can occur after focal therapy in 0-46%: the baseline function and the ablation template are the most important factors predicting post-operative erectile dysfunction. Focal therapy in the salvage setting after external beam radiotherapy has a significantly higher rate of complications. Up to one man in 10 will present a severe complication.Entities:
Keywords: HIFU; complications; cryotherapy; focal therapy; photodynamic therapy; prostate cancer
Year: 2021 PMID: 34322516 PMCID: PMC8311122 DOI: 10.3389/fsurg.2021.696242
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Surg ISSN: 2296-875X
Figure 1Common ablation templates: (A) focal ablation. (B) quadrant ablation. (C) hemi-ablation. (D) “hockey-stick” ablation.
Complications and their rates in the primary focal therapy setting.
| Infectious (urinary tract infection, epididymo-orchitis) | 0–17% |
| Haematuria | Very frequent; not reported |
| Acute urinary retention | 0–17% |
| Urethral sloughing | Frequent; not reported |
| Urinary incontinence | 0–5% |
| Erectile dysfunction | 0–46% |
| Orgasmic/ejaculatory dysfunction | Not reported |
| Recto-urethral fistula | 0–1% |
Suggested protocol for perioperative care in focal therapy.
| Urinary catheter | (3–10 days) | x | x |
| Antibiotic | 7 days | Depending on local guidelines | Depending on choice |
| Paracetamol | 2 weeks | 1,000 mg | PRN |
| Ibuprofen | 2 weeks | 400 mg | 3 times a day |
| Alpha-blocker | 2 weeks | Depending on treatment | Once a day |
| Antimuscarinic drug | Until TWOC | Depending on treatment | PRN |
| Information leaflet | x | x | x |
this may vary according to the energy sourced used.
an information leaflet clearly explaining to the patient possible complications and actions to take after treatment.