CONTEXT: Radical retropubic prostatectomy (RRP) has long been the most common
surgical technique used to treat clinically localized prostate cancer (PCa). More
recently, robot-assisted radical prostatectomy (RARP) has been gaining increasing
acceptance among patients and urologists, and it has become the dominant
technique in the United States despite a paucity of prospective studies or
randomized trials supporting its superiority over RRP. OBJECTIVE: A 2-d consensus
conference of 17 world leaders in prostate cancer and radical prostatectomy was
organized in Pasadena, California, and at the City of Hope Cancer Center, Duarte,
California, under the auspices of the European Association of Urology Robotic
Urology Section to systematically review the currently available data on RARP, to
critically assess current surgical techniques, and to generate best practice
recommendations to guide clinicians and related medical personnel. No commercial
support was obtained for the conference. EVIDENCE ACQUISITION: A systematic
review of the literature was performed in agreement with the Preferred Reporting
Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-analysis statement. EVIDENCE SYNTHESIS: The
results of the systematic literature review were reviewed, discussed, and refined
over the 2-d conference. Key recommendations were generated using a Delphi
consensus approach. RARP is associated with less blood loss and transfusion rates
compared with RRP, and there appear to be minimal differences between the two
approaches in terms of overall postoperative complications. Positive surgical
margin rates are at least equivalent with RARP, but firm conclusions about
biochemical recurrence and other oncologic end points are difficult to draw
because the follow-up in existing studies is relatively short and the overall
experience with RARP in locally advanced PCa is still limited. RARP may offer
advantages in postoperative recovery of urinary continence and erectile function,
although there are methodological limitations in most studies to date and a need
for well-controlled comparative outcomes studies of radical prostatectomy surgery
following best practice guidelines. Surgeon experience and institutional volume
of procedures strongly predict better outcomes in all relevant domains.
CONCLUSIONS: Available evidence suggests that RARP is a valuable therapeutic
option for clinically localized PCa. Further research is needed to clarify the
actual role of RARP in patients with locally advanced disease
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