Contemporaneous comparison of open vs minimally-invasive radical prostatectomy for high-risk prostate cancer

Phillip M. Pierorazio, Jeffrey K. Mullins, John B. Eifler, Kipp Voth, Elias S. Hyams, Misop Han, Christian P. Pavlovich, Trinity J. Bivalacqua, Alan W. Partin, Mohamad E. Allaf, Edward M. Schaeffer

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

35 Scopus citations

Abstract

Objectives To analyze pathological and short-term oncological outcomes in men undergoing open and minimally-invasive radical prostatectomy (MIRP) for high-risk prostate cancer (HRPC; prostate-specific antigen level [PSA] >20 ng/mL, ≥ cT2c, Gleason score 8-10) in a contemporaneous series. Patients and Methods In total, 913 patients with HRPC were identified in the Johns Hopkins Radical Prostatectomy Database subsequent to the inception of MIRP at this institution (2002-2011) Of these, 743 (81.4%) underwent open radical retropubic prostatectomy (ORRP), 105 (11.5%) underwent robot-assisted laparoscopic radical prostatectomy (RALRP) and 65 (7.1%) underwent laparoscopic radical prostatectomy (LRP) for HRPC. Appropriate comparative tests were used to evaluate patient and prostate cancer characteristics. Proportional hazards regression models were used to predict biochemical recurrence. Results Age, race, body mass index, preoperative PSA level, clinical stage, number of positive cores and Gleason score at final pathology were similar between ORRP and MIRP. On average, men undergoing MIRP had smaller prostates and more organ-confined (pT2) disease (P = 0.02). The number of surgeons and surgeon experience were greatest for the ORRP cohort. Overall surgical margin rate was 29.4%, 34.3% and 27.7% (P = 0.52) and 1.9%, 2.9% and 6.2% (P = 0.39) for pT2 disease in men undergoing ORRP, RALRP and LRP, respectively. Biochemical recurrence-free survival among ORRP, RALRP and LRP was 56.3%, 67.8% and 41.1%, respectively, at 3 years (P = 0.6) and the approach employed did not predict biochemical recurrence in regression models. Conclusions At an experienced centre, MIRP is comparable to open radical prostatectomy for HRPC with respect to surgical margin status and biochemical recurrence.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)751-757
Number of pages7
JournalBJU International
Volume112
Issue number6
DOIs
StatePublished - Oct 2013

Keywords

  • high-risk
  • minimally-invasive surgery
  • prostate cancer
  • radical prostatectomy

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Urology

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