28 results on '"Carlsson, Stefan"'
Search Results
2. Salvage radiotherapy after radical prostatectomy: functional outcomes in the LAPPRO trial after 8-year follow-up.
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Carlsson, Stefan, Bock, David, Lantz, Anna, Angenete, Eva, Modig, Katarina Koss, Hugosson, Jonas, Bjartell, Anders, Steineck, Gunnar, Wiklund, Peter, and Haglind, Eva
- Abstract
Objective: Radical prostatectomy reduces mortality among patients with localized prostate cancer, however up to 35% of patients will experience biochemical recurrence, often treated with salvage radiotherapy. The objective of the study was to investigate long-term effects of salvage radiotherapy. Methods: A prospective, controlled, non-randomized trial at 14 Swedish center's including 4,003 patients scheduled for radical prostatectomy 2008-2011. A target trial emulation approach was used to identify eligible patients that was treated with salvage radiotherapy. The control group received no salvage radiotherapy. Outcomes were assessed by patient questionnaires on ordinal scales and statistical group comparisons were made using ordered logit regression with adjustment for baseline outcome and confounding factors. The primary endpoints were bowel, urinary and sexual function and bothering due to dysfunction at 8 years. Results: Eleven percent (330/3,139) of the analyzed study population received salvage radiotherapy. Fecal leakage, leakage of mucus and hematochezia were more common after receiving salvage radiotherapy compared with the control group; 4.5% versus 2.6% odds ratio (95% confidence interval [CI]): (1.90 [1.38; 2.62]), 6.8% versus 1.5% 4.14 (2.98; 5.76) and 8.6% versus 1.2% 4.14 (2.98; 5.76), respectively. Urinary incontinence, erectile dysfunction and hematuria were more common after receiving salvage radiotherapy, 34% versus 23% 2.23 (2.65; 3.00), 65% versus 57% 1.65 (1.18; 2.29) and 16% versus 1.6% 11.17 (5.68; 21.99), respectively. Conclusion: Salvage radiotherapy was associated with increased risk for fecal leakage, hematochezia, urinary incontinence and hematuria. Our results emphasize the importance of selecting patients for salvage radiotherapy to avoid overtreatment and to give high quality pre-treatment information to ensure patients' preparedness for late side-effects. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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3. Surgeon volume and patient-reported urinary incontinence after radical prostatectomy. Population-based register study in Sweden.
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Arnsrud Godtman, Rebecka, Persson, Erik, Bergengren, Oskar, Carlsson, Stefan, Johansson, Eva, Robinsson, David, Hugosson, Jonas, and Stattin, Pär
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RADICAL prostatectomy ,URINARY incontinence ,LYMPHADENECTOMY ,SURGEONS ,PROSTATE cancer patients - Abstract
To investigate the association between surgeon volume and urinary incontinence after radical prostatectomy. A total of 8326 men in The National Prostate Cancer Register of Sweden (NPCR) underwent robot-assisted radical prostatectomy (RARP) between 2017 and 2019 of whom 56% (4668/8 326) had responded to a questionnaire one year after RARP. The questionnaire included the question: 'How much urine leakage do you experience?' with the response alternatives 'Not at all', 'A little', defined as continence and 'Moderately', 'Much/Very much' as incontinence. Association between incontinence and mean number of RARPs/year/surgeon was analysed with multivariable logistic regression including age, Charlson Comorbidity Index (CCI), PSA, prostate volume, number of biopsy cores with cancer, cT stage, Gleason score, lymph node dissection, nerve sparing intent and response rate to the questionnaire. 14% (659/4 668) of the men were incontinent one year after RARP. There was no statistically significant association between surgeon volume and incontinence. Older age (>75 years vs. < 65 years, OR 2.29 [95% CI 1.48–3.53]), higher CCI (CCI 2+ vs. CCI 0, OR 1.37 [95% CI 1.04–1.80]) and no nerve sparing intent (no vs. yes OR 1.53 [95% CI 1.26–1.85]) increased risk of incontinence. There were large differences in the proportion of incontinent men between surgeons with similar annual volumes, which remained after adjustment. The lack of association between surgeon volume and incontinence and the wide range in outcome between surgeons with similar volumes underline the importance of individual feedback to surgeons on functional results. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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4. The Swedish national guidelines on prostate cancer, part 2: recurrent, metastatic and castration resistant disease.
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Bratt, Ola, Carlsson, Stefan, Fransson, Per, Kindblom, Jon, Stranne, Johan, and Karlsson, Camilla Thellenberg
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CASTRATION-resistant prostate cancer , *PROSTATE cancer , *CASTRATION , *PROSTATE cancer patients , *RADICAL prostatectomy , *METASTASIS - Abstract
There is now an unprecedented amount of evidence to consider when revising prostate cancer guidelines. We believe that there is a value in publishing summaries of national clinical guidelines in English for others to read and comment on. This is part 2 of a summary of the Swedish prostate cancer guidelines that were published in June 2022. This part covers recurrence after local treatment and management of metastatic and castration resistant disease. Part 1 covers early detection, diagnostics, staging, patient support and management of non-metastatic disease. The 2022 Swedish guidelines include several new recommendations. Among these is a recommendation of a period of observation with repeated PSA tests for patients with approximately 10 years' life expectancy who experience a BCR more than 2–5 years after radical prostatectomy, to allow for estimating the PSA doubling time before deciding whether to give salvage radiotherapy or not. Recent results from the PEACE-1 trial led to the recommendation of triple-treatment with a GnRH agonist, abiraterone plus prednisolone and 6 cycles of docetaxel for patients with high-volume metastatic disease who are fit for chemotherapy. The Swedish guidelines differ from the European ones by having more restrictive recommendations about genetic testing of and high-dose zoledronic acid or denosumab treatment for men with metastatic prostate cancer, and by recommending considering bicalutamide monotherapy for selected patients with low-volume metastatic disease. The 2022 Swedish prostate cancer guidelines include several new recommendations and some that differ from the European guidelines. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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5. Lymph swelling after radical prostatectomy and pelvic lymph node dissection.
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Carlsson, Stefan, Bottai, Matteo, Lantz, Anna, Bjartell, Anders, Hugosson, Jonas, Steineck, Gunnar, Stranne, Johan, Wiklund, Peter, Haglind, Eva, and Akre, Olof
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PROSTATECTOMY , *LYMPHADENECTOMY , *RADICAL prostatectomy - Published
- 2022
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6. Learning curve for robot-assisted laparoscopic radical prostatectomy in a large prospective multicentre study.
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Bock, David, Nyberg, Martin, Lantz, Anna, Carlsson, Sigrid V., Sjoberg, Daniel D., Carlsson, Stefan, Stranne, Johan, Steineck, Gunnar, Wiklund, Peter, Haglind, Eva, and Bjartell, Anders
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RADICAL prostatectomy ,SURGICAL margin ,RETROPUBIC prostatectomy ,SURGICAL robots ,URINARY incontinence ,LONGITUDINAL method - Abstract
Differences in outcome after radical prostatectomy for prostate cancer can partly be explained by intersurgeon differences, where degree of experience is one important aspect. This study aims to define the learning curve of robot-assisted laparoscopic prostatectomy (RALP) regarding oncological and functional outcomes. Out of 4003 enrolled patients in the LAPPRO trial, 3583 met the inclusion criteria, of whom 885 were operated on by an open technique. In total, 2672 patients with clinically localized prostate cancer from seven Swedish centres were operated on by RALP and followed for 8 years (LAPPRO trial). Oncological outcomes were pathology-reported surgical margins and biochemical recurrence at 8 years. Functional outcomes included patient-reported urinary incontinence and erectile dysfunction at 3, 12 and 24 months. Experience was surgeon-reported experience before and during the study. The relationship between surgeon experience and functional outcomes and surgical margin status was analysed by mixed-effects logistic regression. Biochemical recurrence was analysed by Cox regression, with robust standard errors. The learning curve for positive surgical margins was relatively flat, with rates of 21% for surgeons who had performed 0–74 cases and 24% for surgeons with > 300 cases. Biochemical recurrence at 4 years was 11% (0–74 cases) and 13% (> 300 cases). Incontinence was stable over the learning curve, but erectile function improved at 2 years, from 38% (0–74 cases) to 53% (> 300 cases). Analysis of the learning curve for surgeons performing RALP showed that erectile function improved with increasing number of procedures, which was not the case for oncological outcomes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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7. Population-based, nationwide registration of prostatectomies in Sweden
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Cazzaniga, Walter, Godtman, Rebecka Arnsrud, Carlsson, Stefan, Ahlgren, Göran, Johansson, Eva, Robinson, David, Hugosson, Jonas, and Stattin, Pär
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Urologi och njurmedicin ,Urology and Nephrology ,registry ,NPCR ,prostate cancer ,radical prostatectomy - Abstract
Introduction Radical prostatectomy (RP) is a common surgical procedure with a risk of postoperative erectile dysfunction and urinary incontinence. There is a need for data on RP as a basis for quality assurance and benchmarking. Methods In 2015, prostatectomies in Sweden (PiS) form was implemented in the National Prostate Cancer Register (NPCR) of Sweden with data on pre-, peri- and post-operative variables. Results Out of all radical prostatectomies performed in 2016 in Sweden, 3096/3881 (80%) were registered in PiS. A total of 2605 (84%) were robot-assisted radical prostatectomy (RARP) and 491 (16%) were RRP (retropubic radical prostatectomy). RARP was performed by 91 surgeons of whom 47% operated more than 25 RP/year; and RRP was performed by 69 surgeons of whom 10% performed more than 25 RP/year. RARP had a longer operative time (median operating time: RARP 155 minutes [IQR 124-190]; RRP 129 minutes [IQR 105-171]; P < .001) but was associated with smaller bleeding (median intraoperative blood loss: RARP 100 mL [IQR 50-200], RRP 700 mL [IQR 500-1100]; P < .001). Conclusions We report on a nationwide, population-based register with transparent reporting of data on the performance of radical prostatectomy. These data are needed as a basis for quality assurance with comparisons of results from individual surgeons and hospitals.
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- 2019
8. Urinary continence recovery and oncological outcomes after surgery for prostate cancer analysed by risk category: results from the LAParoscopic prostatectomy robot and open trial.
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Hagman, Anna, Lantz, Anna, Carlsson, Stefan, Höijer, Jonas, Stranne, Johan, Tyritzis, S. I., Haglind, Eva, Bjartell, Anders, Hugosson, Jonas, Akre, Olof, Steineck, Gunnar, and Wiklund, Peter
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PROSTATECTOMY ,PROSTATE surgery ,SURGICAL margin ,DISEASE risk factors ,RADICAL prostatectomy ,TREATMENT effectiveness - Abstract
Purpose: To evaluate urinary continence (UC) recovery and oncological outcomes in different risk-groups after robot-assisted radical prostatectomy (RALP) and open retropubic radical prostatectomy (RRP). Patients and methods: We analysed 2650 men with prostate cancer from seven open (n = 805) and seven robotic (n = 1845) Swedish centres between 2008 and 2011 in a prospective non-randomised trial, LAPPRO. UC recovery was defined as change of pads less than once in 24 h. Information was collected through validated questionnaires. Rate of positive surgical margins (PSM) and biochemical recurrence (BCR), defined as prostate-specific antigen (PSA) > 0.25 mg/ml, were recorded. We stratified patients into two risk groups (low-intermediate and high risk) based on the D'Amico risk classification system. Result: Among men with high-risk prostate cancer, we found significantly higher rates of UC recovery up to 24 months after RRP compared to RALP (66.1% vs 60.5%) RR 0.85 (CI 95% 0.73–0.99) while PSM was more frequent after RRP compared to RALP (46.8% vs 23.5%) RR 1.56 (CI 95% 1.10–2.21). In the same group no significant difference was seen in BCR. Overall, however, BCR was significantly more common after RRP compared to RALP at 24 months (9.8% vs 6.6%) RR 1.43 (Cl 95% 1.08–1.89). The limitations of this study are its non-randomized design and the relatively short time of follow-up. Conclusions: Our study indicates that men with high-risk tumour operated with open surgery had better urinary continence recovery but with a higher risk of PSM than after robotic-assisted laparoscopic surgery. No significant difference was seen in biochemical recurrence. Trial registration: ISRCTN06393679. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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9. Association of surgeon and hospital volume with short-term outcomes after robot-assisted radical prostatectomy: Nationwide, population-based study.
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Godtman, Rebecka Arnsrud, Persson, Erik, Cazzaniga, Walter, Sandin, Fredrik, Carlsson, Stefan, Ahlgren, Göran, Johansson, Eva, Robinsson, David, Hugosson, Jonas, and Stattin, Pär
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RADICAL prostatectomy ,SURGICAL clinics ,SURGICAL robots ,LYMPHADENECTOMY ,SURGEONS ,GLEASON grading system - Abstract
Background and objective: Few studies have investigated the association between surgical volume and outcome of robot-assisted radical prostatectomy (RARP) in an unselected cohort. We sought to investigate the association between surgical volume with peri-operative and short-term outcomes in a nation-wide, population-based study group. Methods: 9,810 RARP's registered in the National Prostate Cancer Register of Sweden (2015–2018) were included. Associations between outcome and volume were analyzed with multivariable logistic regression including age, PSA-density, number of positive biopsy cores, cT stage, Gleason score, and extent of lymph node dissection. Results: Surgeons and hospitals in the highest volume group compared to lowest group had shorter operative time; surgeon (OR 9.20, 95% CI 7.11–11.91), hospital (OR 2.16, 95% CI 1.53–3.06), less blood loss; surgeon (OR 2.58. 95% CI 2.07–3.21) hospital (no difference), more often nerve sparing intention; surgeon (OR 2.89, 95% CI 2.34–3.57), hospital (OR 2.02, 95% CI 1.66–2.44), negative margins; surgeon (OR 1.90, 95% CI 1.54–2.35), hospital (OR 1.28, 95% CI 1.07–1.53). There was wide range in outcome between hospitals and surgeons with similar volume that remained after adjustment. Conclusions: High surgeon and hospital volume were associated with better outcomes. The range in outcome was wide in all volume groups, which indicates that factors besides volume are of importance. Registration of surgical performance is essential for quality control and improvement. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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10. Prostate cancer diagnosis, staging, and treatment in Sweden during the first phase of the COVID-19 pandemic.
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Fallara, Giuseppe, Sandin, Fredrik, Styrke, Johan, Carlsson, Stefan, Lissbrant, Ingela Franck, Ahlgren, Johan, Bratt, Ola, Lambe, Mats, and Stattin, Pär
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COVID-19 pandemic ,CANCER diagnosis ,RADICAL prostatectomy ,PROSTATE cancer ,DIAGNOSIS ,VIRAL transmission - Abstract
The first case of COVID-19 in Sweden was diagnosed in late January 2020, the first recommendations against the spread of the virus were released in mid-March, and the peak of the first wave of the pandemic was reached in March-June. The aim of this cross-sectional study was to assess the short-term effects of the first wave of the COVID-19 pandemic on prostate cancer (PCa) diagnosis, staging, and treatment. Data in the National Prostate Cancer Register (NPCR) of Sweden on newly diagnosed PCa cases and on the number of diagnostic and therapeutic procedures performed between 18 March 2020 and 2 June 2020 were compared with those in the corresponding time periods in 2017–2019, as reported until January 31 of the year after each study period. During the study period in 2020, 36% fewer PCa cases were registered in NPCR compared with the corresponding time period in previous years: 1458 cases in 2020 vs a mean of 2285 cases in 2017–2019. The decrease in new PCa registrations was more pronounced in men above age 75 years, down 51%, than in men aged 70–75, down 37%, and in men below age 70, down 28%. There was no decrease in the number of radical prostatectomies and number of radical radiotherapy courses increased by 32%. During the peak of the first phase of the COVID-19 pandemic, the number of men diagnosed with PCa in Sweden decreased by one third compared with previous years, whereas there was no decrease in the number of curative treatments. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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11. Surgeon heterogeneity significantly affects functional and oncological outcomes after radical prostatectomy in the Swedish LAPPRO trial.
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Nyberg, Martin, Sjoberg, Daniel D., Carlsson, Sigrid V., Wilderäng, Ulrica, Carlsson, Stefan, Stranne, Johan, Wiklund, Peter, Steineck, Gunnar, Haglind, Eva, Hugosson, Jonas, and Bjartell, Anders
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RETROPUBIC prostatectomy ,SURGEONS ,HETEROGENEITY ,RADICAL prostatectomy ,URINARY incontinence ,OPERATIVE surgery - Abstract
Objectives: To evaluate how surgeon heterogeneity – the variation in outcomes between individual surgeons – influences functional and oncological outcomes after robot‐assisted laparoscopic prostatectomy (RALP) and retropubic radical prostatectomy (RRP), and to assess whether surgeon heterogeneity affects the comparison between RALP and RRP. Patients and Methods: Laparoscopic Prostatectomy Robot Open (LAPPRO) is a prospective, controlled, non‐randomized trial performed at 14 Swedish centres with 68 operating surgeons. A total of 4003 men with localized prostate cancer were enrolled between 2008 and 2011. The endpoints were urinary incontinence, erectile dysfunction (ED) and recurrence at 24 months after surgery. Logistic regression models were built to evaluate surgeon heterogeneity and, secondarily, surgeon‐specific factors were added to the models to investigate their influence on heterogeneity and the comparison between RALP and RRP. Results: Among surgeons who performed at least 20 surgeries during the study period (n=25), we observed statistically significant heterogeneity for incontinence (P = 0.001), ED (P < 0.001) and rate of recurrent disease (P < 0.001). The significant heterogeneity remained when analysing only experienced surgeons with a stated experience of at least 250 radical prostatectomies (n=12). Among all participating surgeons (n=68), differences in surgeon volume explained 42% of the observed heterogeneity for incontinence (P = 0.003), 11% for ED (P = 0.03) and 19% for recurrence (P = 0.01). Taking surgeon volume into account when comparing RALP and RRP had a significant impact on the results. The effect was greatest for functional outcomes, and the additional adjustments for the surgeons' previous experience changed whether the difference between techniques was statistically significant or not. The surgeons' annual volume had the greatest effect on the recurrence rate. Conclusions: There was a large degree of heterogeneity among surgeons regarding both functional and oncological outcomes and this had a significant impact on the results when comparing RALP and RRP. Some of the observed heterogeneity was explained by differences in surgeon volume. Efforts to decrease heterogeneity are warranted and variation among surgeons must be accounted for when conducting comparative analyses between surgical techniques. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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12. Oncological and functional outcomes 1 year after radical prostatectomy for very-low-risk prostate cancer: results from the prospective LAPPRO trial
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Carlsson, Stefan, Jäderling, Fredrik, Wallerstedt, Anna, Nyberg, Tommy, Stranne, Johan, Thorsteinsdottir, Thordis, Carlsson, Sigrid V, Bjartell, Anders, Hugosson, Jonas, Haglind, Eva, Steineck, Gunnar, Nyberg, Tommy [0000-0002-9436-0626], and Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository
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Adult ,Male ,Prostatectomy ,urinary incontinence ,Time Factors ,erectile dysfunction ,Prostatic Neoplasms ,very-low-risk prostate cancer ,Middle Aged ,prostate cancer ,Risk Assessment ,radical prostatectomy ,Treatment Outcome ,Humans ,Prospective Studies ,Aged - Abstract
OBJECTIVES: To analyse oncological and functional outcomes 12 months after treatment of very-low-risk prostate cancer with radical prostatectomy in men who could have been candidates for active surveillance. PATIENTS AND METHODS: We conducted a prospective study of all men with very-low-risk prostate cancer who underwent radical prostatectomy at one of 14 participating centres. Validated patient questionnaires were collected at baseline and after 12 months by independent healthcare researchers. Biochemical recurrence (BCR) was defined as prostate-specific antigen (PSA) ≥0.25 ng/mL or treatment with salvage radiotherapy or with hormones. Urinary continence was defined as 0.1 ng/mL 6-12 weeks postoperatively. Erectile function and urinary continence were observed in 44% (98/222) and 84% of the men (264/315), respectively, 12 months postoperatively. The proportion of men achieving the trifecta, defined as preoperative potent and continent men who remained potent and continent with no BCR, was 38% (84/221 men) at 12 months. CONCLUSIONS: Our prospective study of men with very-low-risk prostate cancer undergoing open or robot-assisted radical prostatectomy showed that there were favourable oncological outcomes in approximately two-thirds. Approximately 40% did not have surgically induced urinary incontinence or erectile dysfunction 12 months postoperatively. These results provide additional support for the use of active surveillance in men with very-low-risk prostate cancer; however, the number of men with risk of upgrading and upstaging is not negligible. Improved stratification is still urgently needed.
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- 2016
13. Triple treatment of high-risk prostate cancer. A matched cohort study with up to 19 years follow-up comparing survival outcomes after triple treatment and treatment with hormones and radiotherapy.
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Gunnarsson, Olof, Schelin, Sonny, Brudin, Lars, Carlsson, Stefan, and Damber, Jan-Erik
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PROSTATE cancer ,RADIOTHERAPY ,HORMONE therapy ,COMBINED modality therapy ,COHORT analysis ,CASTRATION-resistant prostate cancer ,GLEASON grading system - Abstract
Purpose: To evaluate the efficacy of a triple treatment strategy, including surgery, on high risk prostate cancer comparing long-term survival outcome with a cohort receiving standard radiotherapy with endocrine therapy. Materials and methods: This study compared two cohorts in survival outcomes, matched on the year of diagnosis and age. In both groups there was a curative intention to treat localized high-risk prostate cancer (one or more of Gleason score 8–10, PSA 20–50 or stage T3), diagnosed between 1995–2010, follow-up at the end of 2014. Triple treatment group: 153 patients treated primarily with radical prostatectomy with neoadjuvant endocrine treatment, and a majority with adjuvant radiotherapy. Standard radiotherapy group: 702 patients with a treatment of either external radiotherapy or high dose brachytherapy combined with external beam therapy, both modalities in combination with neoadjuvant endocrine therapy. Results: The prostate-cancer-specific mortality was 10% for the triple treatment group and 15% for the standard radiotherapy group during the period, HR = 2.01 (1.17–3.43), p = 0.011. The corresponding overall mortality was 26% vs 29%, HR = 1.54 (1.09–2.17), p = 0.015. High Gleason score was the dominating risk factor for early death due to the disease. Clinical T-stage was not an independent risk factor for death in this population. Conclusion: Adding surgery in a multimodal treatment model in high-risk prostate cancer showed significantly better survival outcome compared with the current standard of radiotherapy. Surgery in this group is, therefore, compelling and that also includes a clinical T3-stage of the disease. The study is limited by possible selection bias for the two treatment models. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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14. Comparison of 3D printed prostate models with standard radiological information to aid understanding of the precise location of prostate cancer: A construct validation study.
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Ebbing, Jan, Jäderling, Fredrik, Collins, Justin W., Akre, Olof, Carlsson, Stefan, Höijer, Jonas, Olsson, Mats J., and Wiklund, Peter N.
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PROSTATE cancer ,PROSTATECTOMY ,MAGNETIC resonance imaging ,UROLOGISTS ,MEDICAL care - Abstract
Background: To investigate the reliability with which healthcare professionals with different levels of expertise are able to impart the exact location of prostate cancer (PCA) after (A) reading written magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) reports, (B) attending MRI presentations in multidisciplinary team meetings (MDT), and (C) examining 3D printed prostate models, which represents a new technology to describe the location of PCA lesions. Methods: We used three different PCA cases to assess the three information tools. Construct validation was performed using two healthcare groups with different levels of expertise: (1) Nine expert urologists in PCA, and (2) nine medical students. After each information tool, the study participants plotted the tumor location in a 2-dimensional prostate diagram. A scoring system was established to evaluate the drawings in terms of accuracy of plotting tumor position. Data are shown as median scores with interquartile range. Results: Within the expert group, no significant difference was seen in the overall scoring results between the information tools (p = 0.34). Medical students performed significantly worse with MDT information (p = 0.03). Experts performed better in all three information tools compared to students, resulting in a significantly 25% higher overall total score (25.0[22.3–26.7] vs. 20.0[15.0–24.0], p<0.001). The difference was largest after MDT information, with experts showing a 49% better scoring (p<0.001), and second largest with the 3D printed models, showing a 17% better scoring of the experts (p = 0.07). No difference was found in the written MRI report scoring results between experts and students. Conclusions: 3D printed models provided better orientation guide to medical students compared to MDT MRI presentations. This indicates that the 3D printed models might be easier to understand than the current gold standard MDT conferences. Therefore, 3D models may play an increasingly important role in providing guidance for orientation for less experienced individuals, such as surgical trainees. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
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15. Habits and self-assessed quality of life, negative intrusive thoughts and depressed mood in patients with prostate cancer: a longitudinal study.
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Bock, David, Angenete, Eva, Bjartell, Anders, Carlsson, Stefan, Steineck, Gunnar, Stranne, Johan, Thorsteinsdottir, Thordis, Wiklund, Peter, and Haglind, Eva
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QUALITY of life ,MENTAL depression ,PROSTATE cancer treatment ,PROSTATECTOMY ,ALCOHOL drinking ,LONGITUDINAL method - Abstract
Objective:The aim of this study was to evaluate the association of self-assessed preoperative physical activity, alcohol consumption and smoking with self-assessed quality of life, negative intrusive thoughts and depressed mood after radical prostatectomy. Materials and methods:The Laparoscopic Prostatectomy Robot Open (LAPPRO) trial was a prospective, controlled, non-randomized longitudinal trial of patients (n = 4003) undergoing radical prostatectomy at 14 centers in Sweden. Validated patient questionnaires were collected at baseline, and 3, 12 and 24 months after surgery. Results:Preoperative medium or high physical activity or low alcohol consumption or non-smoking was associated with a lower risk of depressed mood. High alcohol consumption was associated with increased risk of negative intrusive thoughts. Postoperatively, quality of life and negative intrusive thoughts improved gradually in all groups. Depressed mood appeared to be relatively unaffected. Conclusions:Evaluation of preoperative physical activity, tobacco and alcohol consumption habits can be used to identify patients with a depressed mood in need of psychological support before and immediately after surgery. Quality of life and intrusive thoughts improved postoperatively. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2017
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16. Postoperative mortality 90 days after robot-assisted laparoscopic prostatectomy and retropubic radical prostatectomy: a nationwide population-based study.
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Björklund, Johan, Folkvaljon, Yasin, Cole, Alexander, Carlsson, Stefan, Robinson, David, Loeb, Stacy, Stattin, Pär, and Akre, Olof
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POSTOPERATIVE care ,CONVALESCENCE ,PERIOPERATIVE care ,LIFE tables ,VITAL statistics - Abstract
Objective To assess 90-day postoperative mortality after robot-assisted laparoscopic radical prostatectomy ( RARP) and retropubic radical prostatectomy ( RRP) using nationwide population-based registry data. Patients and Methods We conducted a cohort study using the National Prostate Cancer Register of Sweden, including 22 344 men with localized prostate cancer of clinical stage T1-T3, whose prostate-specific antigen levels were <50 μg/mL and who had undergone primary radical prostatectomy in the period 1998-2012. Vital status was ascertained through the Total Population Register. The rates for 90-day postoperative mortality were analysed using logistic regression analysis, and comparisons of 90-day mortality with the background population were made using standardized mortality ratios ( SMRs). Results Of the 14 820 men who underwent RRP, 29 (0.20%) died, and of the 7 524 men who underwent RARP, 10 (0.13%) died. Mortality in the cohort during the 90-day postoperative period was lower than in an age-matched background population: SMR 0.57 (95% confidence interval [ CI] 0.39-0.75). There was no statistically significant difference in 90-day mortality according to surgical method: RARP vs RRP odds ratio ( OR) 1.14; 95% CI 0.46-2.81. Postoperative 90-day mortality decreased over time: 2008-2012 vs 1998-2007 OR 0.44; 95% CI 0.21-0.95, mainly because of lower mortality after RARP. Conclusion The 90-day postoperative mortality rates were low after RARP and RRP and there was no statistically significant difference between the methods. Given the long life expectancy among men with low- and intermediate-risk prostate cancer, very low postoperative mortality is a prerequisite for RP, which was fulfilled by both RRP and RARP. The selection of healthy men for RP is highlighted by the lower 90-day mortality after RP compared with the background population. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2016
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17. Patient and tumour-related factors for prediction of urinary incontinence after radical prostatectomy.
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Wallerstedt, Anna, Carlsson, Stefan, Steineck, Gunnar, Thorsteinsdottir, Thordis, Hugosson, Jonas, Stranne, Johan, Wilderäng, Ulrica, Haglind, Eva, and Wiklund, N. Peter
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URINARY incontinence , *HOSPITALS , *CONFIDENCE intervals , *PROSTATE cancer , *TRANSURETHRAL prostatectomy - Abstract
Objective. The aim of this study was to identify preoperative patient and turnout-related factors associated with 12 months postoperative urinary incontinence. Material and methods. In total, 1529 men who had undergone radical prostatectomy for clinically localized prostate cancer between September 2008 and February 2010 at 15 Swedish hospitals completed a questionnaire before, 3 and 12 months after surgery. Urinary leakage, comorbidity and possible confounders were measured by self-administered validated questionnaires. Clinical data were collected preoperatively and postoperatively. The primary outcome, incontinence, was defined as the change of one pad or more per day. The ratio of proportions, estimated according to the log-binomial regression model, was analysed for 38 different factors and is presented as relative risks with 95% confidence intervals. Age-adjusted relative risk was calculated in the corresponding bivariate regression model. Results. Prospective data were available from 1360 men (response rate 89%). Results showed that age at surgery predicts long-term urinary incontinence exponentially. Patients reporting urinary leakage before prostate cancer diagnosis had an age-adjusted relative risk of 1.8 (95% confidence interval 1.3-2.4) for incontinence 12 months postoperatively. No statistically significant correlation was found between previous transurethral resection of the prostate, high body mass index or the other 34 evaluated factors and postoperative incontinence. Conclusions. Of 38 possible risk factors only age at surgery and preoperative urinary leakage were associated with 12 months postoperative incontinence in this study comprising 1360 men operated with radical prostatectomy. These findings may help the surgeon to have a targeted risk conversation with the patient before the treatment decision is made. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
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18. Karolinska prostatectomy: A robot-assisted laparoscopic radical prostatectomy technique.
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Nilsson, Andreas E., Carlsson, Stefan, Laven, Brett A., and Wiklund, N. Peter
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PROSTATECTOMY , *PROSTATE cancer , *SURGICAL robots , *LAPAROSCOPIC surgery , *DISSECTION - Abstract
Objective. The last decade has witnessed an increasing trend towards minimally invasive management of prostate cancer, including laparoscopic and, more recently, robot-assisted laparoscopic prostatectomy. Several different laparoscopic approaches have been continuously developed during the last 5 years and it is still unclear which technique yields the best outcome. We present our current technique of robot-assisted laparoscopic radical prostatectomy. Material and methods. The technique described has evolved during the course of >400 robotic prostatectomies performed by the robotic team since the robot-assisted laparoscopic radical prostatectomy program was introduced at Karolinska University Hospital in January 2002. Surgical procedure. Our procedure comprises several modifications of previously reported ones, and we utilize fewer robotic instruments to reduce costs. An extended posterior dissection is performed to aid in the bladder neck-sparing dissection. In nerve-sparing procedures the vesicles are divided to avoid damage to the erectile nerves. In order to preserve the apical anatomy the dorsal venous complex is incised sharply and is first over-sewn after the apical dissection is completed. Conclusions. Our technique enables a more fluent dissection than previously described robotic techniques. Minimizing changes of instruments and the camera not only cuts costs but also reduces inefficient operating maneuvers, such as switching between 30° and 0° lenses during the procedure. We present a technique which in our hands has achieved excellent functional and oncological results. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2006
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19. Functional and Oncological Outcomes After Open Versus Robot-assisted Laparoscopic Radical Prostatectomy for Localised Prostate Cancer: 8-Year Follow-up.
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Lantz, Anna, Bock, David, Akre, Olof, Angenete, Eva, Bjartell, Anders, Carlsson, Stefan, Modig, Katarina Koss, Nyberg, Martin, Kollberg, Karin Stinesen, Steineck, Gunnar, Stranne, Johan, Wiklund, Peter, and Haglind, Eva
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PROSTATECTOMY , *RADICAL prostatectomy , *SURGICAL margin , *SURGICAL robots , *RETROPUBIC prostatectomy , *FUNCTIONAL status - Abstract
Radical prostatectomy reduces mortality among patients with localised prostate cancer. Evidence on whether different surgical techniques can affect mortality rates is lacking. To evaluate functional and oncological outcomes 8 yr after robot-assisted laparoscopic prostatectomy (RALP) and open retropubic radical prostatectomy (RRP). We enrolled 4003 patients in a prospective, controlled, nonrandomised trial comparing RALP and RRP in 14 Swedish centres between 2008 and 2011. Data for functional outcomes were assessed via validated patient questionnaires administered preoperatively and at 12 and 24 mo and 8 yr after surgery. The primary endpoint was urinary incontinence. Functional outcomes at 8 yr were analysed using the modified Poisson regression approach. Urinary incontinence was not significantly different at 8 yr after surgery between RALP and RRP (27% vs 29%; adjusted risk ratio [aRR] 1.05, 95% confidence interval [CI] 0.90–1.23). Erectile dysfunction was significantly lower in the RALP group (66% vs 70%; aRR 0.93, 95% CI 0.87–0.99). Prostate cancer–specific mortality (PCSM) was significantly lower in the RALP group at 8 yr after surgery (40/2699 vs 25/885; aRR 0.56, 95% CI 0.34–0.93). Differences in oncological outcomes were mainly seen in the group with high D'Amico risk, with a lower risk of positive surgical margins (21% vs 34%), biochemical recurrence (51% vs 69%), and PCSM (14/220 vs 11/77) for RALP versus RRP. The main limitation is the nonrandomised design. In this prospective multicentre controlled trial, PCSM at 8 yr after surgery was lower for RALP in comparison to RRP. A causal relationship between surgical technique and mortality cannot be inferred, but the result confirms that RALP is oncologically safe. Taken together with better short-term results reported elsewhere, our findings confirm that implementation of RALP may continue. Our study comparing two surgical techniques for removal of the prostate for localised prostate cancer shows that a robot-assisted minimally invasive technique is safe in the long term. Together with previous results showing some better short-term effects with this approach, our findings support continued use of robot-assisted surgery. A prospective, controlled, nonrandomised trial compared robot-assisted laparoscopic prostatectomy (RALP) and retropubic radical prostatectomy (RRP) in 4003 patients with localised prostate cancer. The results show significantly lower rates of erectile dysfunction and prostate cancer–specific mortality in the RALP group compared to the RRP group. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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20. Health Economic Analysis of Open and Robot-assisted Laparoscopic Surgery for Prostate Cancer Within the Prospective Multicentre LAPPRO Trial.
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Forsmark, Annabelle, Björholt, Ingela, Marlow, Tom, Gehrman, Jacob, Angenete, Eva, Haglind, Eva, Bjartell, Anders, Carlsson, Stefan, Wallerstedt, Anna, Wiklund, Peter, Hugosson, Jonas, Stranne, Johan, Stinesen-Kollberg, Karin, and Wilderäng, Ulrica
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LAPAROSCOPIC surgery , *PROSTATE cancer , *COST analysis , *QUALITY of life , *MEDICAL economics - Abstract
Abstract Background The rapid adoption of robot-assisted laparoscopy in radical prostatectomy has preceded data regarding associated costs. Qualitative evidence regarding cost outcomes is lacking. Objective This study assessed how costs were affected by robot-assisted laparoscopic prostatectomy (RALP) compared with open surgery. Design, setting, and participants Cost analysis was based on the dataset of the LAPPRO (Laparoscopic Prostatectomy Robot Open) clinical trial, which is a prospective controlled, nonrandomised trial of patients who underwent prostatectomy at 14 centres in Sweden between September 2008 and November 2011. Currently, data are available from a follow-up period of 24 mo. Intervention In the LAPPRO trial, RALP was compared with radical retropubic prostatectomy (RRP). Outcome measurements and statistical analysis Costs per surgical technique were assessed based on resource variable data from the LAPPRO database. The calculation of average costs was based on mean values; Swedish currency was converted to purchasing power parity US dollar (PPP$). All tests were two-tailed and conducted at α = 0.05 significance level. Results and limitations The cost analysis comprised 2638 men. Based on the LAPPRO trial data, RALP was associated with an increased cost/procedure of PPP$ 3837 (95% confidence interval: 2747–4928) compared with RRP. The result was sensitive to variations in caseload. Main drivers of overall cost were robotic system cost, operation time, length of stay, and sick leave. Limitations of the study include the uneven distribution between RALP and RRP regarding procedures in public/for-profit hospitals and surgeon/centre procedural volume. Conclusions Based on the LAPPRO trial data, this study showed that RALP was associated with an increased cost compared with RRP in Swedish health care. There are many factors influencing the costs, making the absolute result dependent on the specific setting. However, by identifying the main cost drivers and/or most influential parameters, the study provides support for informed decisions and predictions. Patient summary In this study, we looked at the cost outcome when performing prostatectomies by robot-assisted laparoscopic technique compared with open surgery in Sweden. We found that the robot-assisted procedure was associated with a higher mean cost. Take Home Message This cost analysis reports that compared with open surgery, robot-assisted laparoscopy for prostate cancer was associated with a net increase in cost. One important conclusion is that widespread implementation of costly new techniques should not precede outcomes from well-designed trials. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
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21. Erectile Function and Oncologic Outcomes Following Open Retropubic and Robot-assisted Radical Prostatectomy: Results from the LAParoscopic Prostatectomy Robot Open Trial.
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Sooriakumaran, Prasanna, Pini, Giovannalberto, Nyberg, Tommy, Derogar, Maryam, Carlsson, Stefan, Stranne, Johan, Bjartell, Anders, Hugosson, Jonas, Steineck, Gunnar, and Wiklund, Peter N.
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PROSTATE cancer patients , *LAPAROSCOPIC surgery , *PENILE erection , *SURGICAL robots ,PROSTATECTOMY complications - Abstract
Background Whether surgeons perform better utilising a robot-assisted laparoscopic technique compared with an open approach during prostate cancer surgery is debatable. Objective To report erectile function and early oncologic outcomes for both surgical modalities, stratified by prostate cancer risk grouping. Design, setting, and participants In a prospective nonrandomised trial, we recruited 2545 men with prostate cancer from seven open ( n = 753) and seven robot-assisted ( n = 1792) Swedish centres (2008–2011). Outcome measurements and statistical analysis Clinometrically-validated questionnaire-based patient-reported erectile function was collected before, 3 mo, 12 mo, and 24 mo after surgery. Surgeon-reported degree of neurovascular-bundle preservation, pathologist-reported positive surgical margin (PSM) rates, and 2-yr prostate-specific antigen-relapse rates were measured. Results and limitations Among 1702 preoperatively potent men, we found enhanced erectile function recovery for low/intermediate-risk patients in the robot-assisted group at 3 mo. For patients with high-risk tumours, point estimates for erectile function recovery at 24 mo favoured the open surgery group. The degree of neurovascular bundle preservation and erectile function recovery were greater correlated for robot-assisted surgery. In pT2 tumours, 10% versus 17% PSM rates were observed for open and robot-assisted surgery, respectively; corresponding rates for pT3 tumours were 48% and 33%. These differences were associated with biochemical recurrence in pT3 but not pT2 disease. The study is limited by its nonrandomised design and relatively short follow-up. Conclusions Earlier recovery of erectile function in the robot-assisted surgery group in lower-risk patients is counterbalanced by lower PSM rates for open surgeons in organ-confined disease; thus, both open and robotic surgeons need to consider this trade-off when determining the plane of surgical dissection. Robot-assisted surgery also facilitates easier identification of nerve preservation planes during radical prostatectomy as well as wider dissection for pT3 cases. Patient summary For prostate cancer surgery, an open operation reduces erection problems in high-risk cancers but has higher relapse rates than robotic surgery. Relapse rates appear similar in low/intermediate-risk cancers and the robot appears better at preserving erections in these cases. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
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22. Short-term Results after Robot-assisted Laparoscopic Radical Prostatectomy Compared to Open Radical Prostatectomy.
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Wallerstedt, Anna, Tyritzis, Stavros I., Thorsteinsdottir, Thordis, Carlsson, Stefan, Stranne, Johan, Gustafsson, Ove, Hugosson, Jonas, Bjartell, Anders, Wilderäng, Ulrica, Wiklund, N. Peter, Steineck, Gunnar, and Haglind, Eva
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PROSTATECTOMY , *SURGICAL robots , *LAPAROSCOPIC surgery , *PROSTATE cancer treatment , *HEALTH outcome assessment , *LOGISTIC regression analysis , *UROLOGY - Abstract
Background Robot-assisted laparoscopic radical prostatectomy has become a widespread technique despite a lack of randomised trials showing its superiority over open radical prostatectomy. Objective To compare in-hospital characteristics and patient-reported outcomes at 3 mo between robot-assisted laparoscopic and open retropubic radical prostatectomy. Design, setting, and participants A prospective, controlled trial was performed of all men who underwent radical prostatectomy at 14 participating centres. Validated patient questionnaires were collected at baseline and after 3 mo by independent health-care researchers. Outcome measurements and statistical analysis The difference in outcome between the two treatment groups were analysed using logistic regression analysis, with adjustment for identified confounders. Results and limitations Questionnaires were received from 2506 (95%) patients. The robot-assisted surgery group had less perioperative bleeding (185 vs 683 ml, p < 0.001) and shorter hospital stay (3.3 vs 4.1 d, p < 0.001) than the open surgery group. Operating time was shorter with the open technique (103 vs 175 min, p < 0.001) compared with the robot-assisted technique. Reoperation during initial hospital stay was more frequent after open surgery after adjusting for tumour characteristics and lymph node dissection (1.6% vs 0.7%, odds ratio [OR] 0.31, 95% confidence interval [CI 95%] 0.11–0.90). Men who underwent open surgery were more likely to seek healthcare (for one or more of 22 specified disorders identified prestudy) compared to men in the robot-assisted surgery group ( p = 0.03). It was more common to seek healthcare for cardiovascular reasons in the open surgery group than in the robot-assisted surgery group, after adjusting for nontumour and tumour-specific confounders, (7.9% vs 5.8%, OR 0.63, CI 95% 0.42–0.94). The readmittance rate was not statistically different between the groups. A limitation of the study is the lack of a standardised tool for the assessment of the adverse events. Conclusions This large prospective study confirms previous findings that robot-assisted laparoscopic radical prostatectomy is a safe procedure with some short-term advantages compared to open surgery. Whether these advantages also include long-term morbidity and are related to acceptable costs remain to be studied. Patient summary We compare patient-reported outcomes between two commonly used surgical techniques. Our results show that the choice of surgical technique may influence short-term outcomes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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23. Degree of Preservation of the Neurovascular Bundles During Radical Prostatectomy and Urinary Continence 1 Year after Surgery.
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Steineck, Gunnar, Bjartell, Anders, Hugosson, Jonas, Axén, Elin, Carlsson, Stefan, Stranne, Johan, Wallerstedt, Anna, Persson, Josefin, Wilderäng, Ulrica, Thorsteinsdottir, Thordis, Gustafsson, Ove, Lagerkvist, Mikael, Jiborn, Thomas, Haglind, Eva, and Wiklund, Peter
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PROSTATE cancer , *PROSTATECTOMY , *URINARY incontinence , *NEUROVASCULAR diseases , *ONCOLOGIC surgery , *SURGICAL robots - Abstract
Background Many elderly or impotent men with prostate cancer may not receive a bundle-preserving radical prostatectomy as a result of uncertainty regarding the effect on urinary incontinence. Objective We searched for predictors of urinary incontinence 1 yr after surgery among surgical steps during radical prostatectomy. Design, setting, and participants More than 100 surgeons in 14 centers prospectively collected data on surgical steps during an open or robot-assisted laparoscopic radical prostatectomy. At 1 yr after surgery, a neutral third-party secretariat collected patient-reported information on urinary incontinence. After excluding men with preoperative urinary incontinence or postoperative irradiation, data were available for 3379 men. Intervention Surgical steps during radical prostatectomy, including dissection plane as a measure of the degree of preservation of the two neurovascular bundles. Outcome measurements and statistical analysis Urinary incontinence 1 yr after surgery was measured as patient-reported use of pads. In different categories of surgical steps, we calculated the percentage of men changing pads “about once per 24 h” or more often. Relative risks were calculated as percentage ratios between categories. Results and limitations A strong association was found between the degree of bundle preservation and urinary incontinence 1 yr after surgery. We set the highest degree of bundle preservation (bilateral intrafascial dissection) as the reference category (relative risk = 1.0). For the men in the remaining six groups, ordered according to the degree of preservation, we obtained the following relative risks (95% confidence interval [CI]): 1.07 (0.63–1.83), 1.19 (0.77–1.85), 1.56 (0.99–2.45), 1.78 (1.13–2.81), 2.27 (1.45–3.53), and 2.37 (1.52–3.69). In the latter group, no preservation of any of the bundles was performed. The pattern was similar for preoperatively impotent men and for elderly men. Limitations of this analysis include the fact that noise influences the relative risks, due to variations between surgeons in the use of undocumented surgical steps of the procedure, variations in surgical experience and in how the surgical steps are reported, as well as variations in the metrics of patient-reported use of pads. Conclusions We found that the degree of preservation of the two neurovascular bundles during radical prostatectomy predicts the rate of urinary incontinence 1 yr after the operation. According to our findings, preservation of both neurovascular bundles to avoid urinary incontinence is also meaningful for elderly and impotent men. Patient summary We studied the degree of preservation of the two neurovascular bundles during radical prostatectomy and found that the risk of incontinence decreases if the surgeon preserves two bundles instead of one, and if the surgeon preserves some part of a bundle rather than not doing so. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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24. A Multinational, Multi-institutional Study Comparing Positive Surgical Margin Rates Among 22393 Open, Laparoscopic, and Robot-assisted Radical Prostatectomy Patients.
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Sooriakumaran, Prasanna, Srivastava, Abhishek, Shariat, Shahrokh F., Stricker, Phillip D., Ahlering, Thomas, Eden, Christopher G., Wiklund, Peter N., Sanchez-Salas, Rafael, Mottrie, Alexandre, Lee, David, Neal, David E., Ghavamian, Reza, Nyirady, Peter, Nilsson, Andreas, Carlsson, Stefan, Xylinas, Evanguelos, Loidl, Wolfgang, Seitz, Christian, Schramek, Paul, and Roehrborn, Claus
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PROSTATE cancer patients , *PROSTATE cancer treatment , *COMPARATIVE studies , *LAPAROSCOPIC surgery , *ONCOLOGIC surgery , *CANCER relapse , *PROSTATE cancer risk factors , *HEALTH outcome assessment - Abstract
Background Positive surgical margins (PSMs) are a known risk factor for biochemical recurrence in patients with prostate cancer (PCa) and are potentially affected by surgical technique and volume. Objective To investigate whether radical prostatectomy (RP) modality and volume affect PSM rates. Design, setting, and participants Fourteen institutions in Europe, the United States, and Australia were invited to participate in this study, all of which retrospectively provided margins data on 9778 open RP, 4918 laparoscopic RP, and 7697 robotic RP patients operated on between January 2000 and October 2011. Outcome measurements and statistical analyses The outcome measure was PSM rate. Multivariable logistic regression analyses and propensity score methods identified odds ratios for risk of a PSM for one modality compared with another, after adjustment for age, preoperative prostate-specific antigen, postoperative Gleason score, pathologic stage, and year of surgery. Classic adjustment using standard covariates was also implemented to compare PSM rates based on center volume for each minimally invasive surgical cohort. Results and limitations Open RP patients had higher-risk PCa at time of surgery on average and were operated on earlier in the study time period on average, compared with minimally invasive cohorts. Crude margin rates were lowest for robotic RP (13.8%), intermediate for laparoscopic RP (16.3%), and highest for open RP (22.8%); significant differences persisted, although were ameliorated, after statistical adjustments. Lower-volume centers had increased risks of PSM compared with the highest-volume center for both laparoscopic RP and robotic RP. The study is limited by its nonrandomized nature; missing data across covariates, especially year of surgery in many of the open cohort cases; lack of standardized histologic processing and central pathology review; and lack of information regarding potential confounders such as patient comorbidity, nerve-sparing status, lymph node status, tumor volume, and individual surgeon caseload. Conclusions This multinational, multi-institutional study of 22 393 patients after RP suggests that PSM rates might be lower after minimally invasive techniques than after open RP and that PSM rates are affected by center volume in laparoscopic and robotic cases. Patient summary In this study, we compared the effectiveness of different types of surgery for prostate cancer by looking at the rates of cancer cells left at the margins of what was removed in the operations. We compared open, keyhole, and robotic surgery from many centers across the globe and found that robotic and keyhole operations appeared to have lower margin rates than open surgeries. How many cases a center and surgeon do seems to affect this rate for both robotic and keyhole procedures. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2014
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25. Radical Prostatectomy, Sparing of the Seminal Vesicles, and Painful Orgasm.
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Mogorovich, Andrea, Nilsson, Andreas E., Tyritzis, Stavros I., Carlsson, Stefan, Jonsson, Martin, Haendler, Leif, Nyberg, Tommy, Steineck, Gunnar, and Wiklund, N. Peter
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PROSTATECTOMY , *SEMINAL vesicles , *ORGASM , *PROSTATE cancer , *SEXUAL excitement , *HEALTH outcome assessment - Abstract
Introduction Erectile dysfunction has been widely investigated as the major factor responsible for sexual bother in patients after radical prostatectomy ( RP); painful orgasm ( PO) is one element of this bother, but little is known about its prevalence and its effects on sexual health. Aim This study aims to investigate the prevalence of PO and to identify potential risk factors. Main Outcome Measures A total of 1,411 consecutive patients underwent open (radical retropubic prostatectomy) or robot-assisted laparoscopic RP between 2002 and 2006. The patients were asked to complete a study-specific questionnaire. Methods Of a total of 145 questions, 5 dealt with the orgasmic characteristics. The questionnaire was also administered to a comparison group of 442 persons, matched for age and area of residency. Results The response rate was 91% (1,288 patients). A total of 143 (11%) patients reported PO. Among the 834 men being able to have an orgasm, the prevalence was 18% vs. 6% in the comparison group (relative risk [ RR] 2.8, 95% confidence interval [ CI] 1.7-4.5). When analyzed as independent variables, bilateral seminal vesicle (SV)-sparing approach ( RR 2.33, 95% CI 1.0-5.3, P = 0.045) and age <60 years were significantly related to the presence of PO (95% CI 0.5-0.9, P = 0.019). After adjustment for age, bilateral SV-sparing still remained a significant predictor for occurrence of PO. Conclusions We found that PO occurs significantly more often in patients undergoing bilateral SV-sparing RP when compared with age-matched comparison population. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2013
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26. Thromboembolic Events Following Surgery for Prostate Cancer
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Van Hemelrijck, Mieke, Garmo, Hans, Holmberg, Lars, Bill-Axelson, Anna, Carlsson, Stefan, Akre, Olof, Stattin, Pär, and Adolfsson, Jan
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THROMBOEMBOLISM , *PROSTATE cancer & genetics , *PROSTATE cancer treatment , *PROSTATE surgery , *PREOPERATIVE risk factors , *UROLOGICAL surgery - Abstract
Abstract: Background: Prostate cancer (PCa) and surgery are both associated with increased risk of thromboembolic diseases (TED). Objective: We assessed risk of TED among men undergoing different types of urologic surgery. Design, setting, and participants: Using the Prostate Cancer Database Sweden (PCBaSe) Sweden, we identified all men (n =45 065) undergoing pelvic lymph node dissection (PLND), radical prostatectomy (RP) with or without PLND, orchiectomy due to PCa, or a transurethral resection of the prostate (TURP). We identified a comparison cohort from the population. Outcome measurements and statistical analysis: Main outcomes were deep venous thrombosis (DVT) and pulmonary embolism (PE) as primary diagnoses in the National Patient Register or Cause of Death Register (2002–2010). We calculated hazard ratios (HR) and 95% confidence intervals (CI) using multivariable Cox proportional hazards models. Results and limitations: All surgical procedures were associated with increased risk of TED; laparoscopic and open RP with a PLND were the most strongly associated with TED (HR for PE: 8.1 [95% CI, 2.9–23.0] and 7.8 [95% CI, 4.9–13], respectively). For surgery including a PLND, the risk increased during the second half of the first postoperative month. The HR for PE after TURP in men with PCa was 3.0 (95% CI, 1.8–5.1). Patients with a history of TED had a strongly increased risk of TED (HR for DVT: 4.5; 95% CI, 2.6–8.0). A limitation is lack of information on TED prophylaxis, but its use was standardized during the study period for RP and PLND. Other limitations are lack of information on extent of PLND and lifestyle factors. Conclusions: Surgeries for PCa, including TURP, are associated with hospitalization for TED. Patients with a history of TED and patients undergoing a PLND were at highest risk. The largest risk was observed from days 14 to 28 postoperatively. Thus, our results suggest that prophylactic measures may be beneficial during the first 4 wk in these patients. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2013
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27. Inguinal Hernia After Radical Prostatectomy for Prostate Cancer: Results From a Randomized Setting and a Nonrandomized Setting
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Stranne, Johan, Johansson, Eva, Nilsson, Andreas, Bill-Axelson, Anna, Carlsson, Stefan, Holmberg, Lars, Johansson, Jan-Erik, Nyberg, Tommy, Ruutu, Mirja, Wiklund, N. Peter, and Steineck, Gunnar
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INGUINAL hernia , *RETROPUBIC prostatectomy , *PROSTATE cancer , *PROSTATE surgery , *RANDOMIZED controlled trials , *CANCER risk factors , *OPERATIVE surgery , *SURGICAL robots - Abstract
Abstract: Background: Observational data indicate that retropubic radical prostatectomy (RRP) for prostate cancer (PCa) may induce inguinal hernia (IH) formation. Little is known about the influence of robot-assisted radical prostatectomy (RALP) on IH risk. Objective: To compare the incidence of IH after RRP and RALP to that of nonoperated patients with PCa and to a population control. Design, setting, and participants: We studied two groups. All 376 men included in the Scandinavian Prostate Cancer Group Study Number 4 constitute study group 1. Patients were randomly assigned RRP or watchful waiting (WW). The 1411 consecutive patients who underwent RRP or RALP at Karolinska University Hospital constitute study group 2. Men without PCa, matched for age and residence to each study group, constitute controls. Measurements: Postoperative IH incidence was detected through a validated questionnaire. The participation rates were 82.7% and 88.4% for study groups 1 and 2, respectively. Results and limitations: The Kaplan-Meier cumulative occurrence of IH development after 48 mo in study group 1 was 9.3%, 2.4%, and 0.9% for the RRP, the WW, and the control groups, respectively. There were statistically significant differences between the RRP group and the WW and control groups, but not between the last two. In study group 2 the cumulative risk of IH development at 48 mo was 12.2%, 5.8%, and 2.6% for the RRP, the RALP, and the control group, respectively. There were statistically significant differences between the RRP group and the RALP and control groups, but not between the last two. Conclusions: RRP for PCa leads to an increased risk of IH development. RALP may lower the risk as compared to open surgery. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
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28. Reply to Wei Zhang So, Ziting Wang, and Ho Yee Tiong's Letter to the Editor re: Anna Lantz, David Bock, Olof Akre, et al. Functional and Oncological Outcomes After Open Versus Robot-assisted Laparoscopic Radical Prostatectomy for Localised Prostate Cancer: 8-Year Follow-up. Eur Urol 2021;80:650–60
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Lantz, Anna, Bock, David, Akre, Olof, Angenete, Eva, Bjartell, Anders, Carlsson, Stefan, Koss Modig, Katarina, Nyberg, Martin, Stinesen Kollberg, Karin, Steineck, Gunnar, Stranne, Johan, Wiklund, Peter, and Haglind, Eva
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RADICAL prostatectomy , *SURGICAL robots , *PROSTATE - Published
- 2022
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