Clinical Significance of Preoperative Assessment of Intravesical Prostatic Protrusion in Radical Prostatectomy

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Abstract

Background: Intravesical prostatic protrusion (IPP) is common in prostate-related diseases, whose clinical significance in radical prostatectomy was unknown. Methods: 791 patients underwent robot-assisted or open radical prostatectomy at our institution were enrolled. The transabdominal ultrasound examination of prostate and IPP was carried out preoperatively, by which IPP was classified as no (0-0.5cm, grade 0), slight (0.6-1.0cm, grade 1) and noticeable (>1.0cm, grade 2). Results: 185 (23.4%), 170 (21.5%) and 436 (55.1%) patients had no, slight and noticeable IPP, respectively. Generally, prostate specific antigen (PSA), Gleason score and pT stage increased with IPP grade. In particular, cases with grade 0 IPP had a decreased proportion of seminal vesicles’ involvement than those with grade 1 and grade 2 IPP (p=0.035). Reconstruction of the bladder neck (in robot-assisted group), increased surgical bleeding (>200ml), and prolonged postoperative hospital stays (>14 days) happened more in patients with grade 2 IPP. Blood transfusion only happened in patients with noticeable IPP. PSM of bladder neck was only associated with higher IPP grade in open surgery group (p=0.032), not in robot-assisted surgery group. Conclusion: IPP is associated with cancer aggressiveness, surgery difficulty and PSM of bladder neck in prostate cancer. Assessment of it provides more information for operations.

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APA

Tang, J., Xi, W., Zhu, Y., Wang, H., Sun, L., Jiang, S., & Guo, J. (2023). Clinical Significance of Preoperative Assessment of Intravesical Prostatic Protrusion in Radical Prostatectomy. Journal of Cancer, 14(15), 2889–2894. https://doi.org/10.7150/jca.86582

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