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Dr. Slawin in the News

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“Advanced Robotics Techniques” Symposium
In August, 2006, I served as a faculty member for the 2006 “ Advanced
Robotics Techniques” (“ART”) of Prostatectomy
Symposium hosted by Ash Tewari, M.D. at Weill Cornell School of Medicine
in New York City. The meeting was a comprehensive course for practicing
urologists that focused on the surgical treatment of prostate cancer and
management of post-operative morbidities. This year's speakers included
leaders in the field of prostate cancer therapy, including Peter Scardino,
Louis Kavoussi, Robert Myers, Michael Koch, Jay Smith, Inderbir Gill, Vip
Patel, and myself.
During my presentation,
I described the criteria I use at the Baylor Prostate Center when counseling
patients regarding the best choice of therapy for each individual patient.
Through careful study and analysis of the 759 consecutive patients treated
surgically by me since 2000, certain key points have become apparent:
- The majority of patients who undergo PSA-based screening for prostate
cancer as part of their routine healthcare, and in whom prostate cancer
is eventually diagnosed, have early stage, clinically localized prostate
cancer.
- Those patients who have very small tumors (< 3mm total) in a properly
performed 10- or 12- core biopsy, that are Gleason 6 or lower, can often
be followed on an active surveillance program rather than undergoing immediate
treatment. Active surveillance at the Baylor Prostate Center always includes
at least one additional set of prostate biopsies obtained by me, within
6 months of the first biopsy or sometimes sooner, depending on the quality
of the original biopsy.
- Patients with significant, curable prostate cancer, e.g. those with
at least 3 mm of Gleason 6 cancer, or any amount of Gleason 7 or greater
tumors are probably best treated rather than deferring treatment with active
surveillance.
- Patients with Gleason 6 tumor or less extensive Gleason 7 tumors are
excellent candidates for Robotic Assisted Laparoscopic Prostatectomy (RALP).
Patients treated with RALP can expect an excellent outcome, with low, “best
in class” positive margin rates, a shorter hospital stay, lower blood
loss, and a more rapid and complete return of both continence and potency
after surgery, compared to standard, open RP techniques.
- Continuing advancements in our technique for performing RALP, most dramatically
in February, 2005 when we began to include a bladder
neck (BN) suspension to the procedure, have dramatically improved the recovery of continence
in much the same way that a similar technical change in the technique for
open RP, instituted in 1990 by Dr. Peter Scardino, had a dramatically positive
effect on the recovery of continence after open RP.
- Patients with larger Gleason 7 tumors, or those with high grade, Gleason
8 – 10, are most effectively treated when a careful, extended lymph
node dissection, that includes the removal of all lymph nodes situated
in the iliac, hypogastric, and obturator regions, is performed as part
of the prostatectomy procedure. This type of lymph node dissection can
only be best performed using an open, rather than robotic-assisted, approach.
Remarkably high cure rates, even when a single lymph node is found to be
involved with prostate cancer, have been achieved by applying this advanced
technique in lymph node dissection for these selected, higher risk patients.
- Patients with larger Gleason 7 – 10 tumors, situated primarily
at the base of the prostate, who have a high risk of seminal vesicle invasion,
can achieve a lower positive margin rate and higher cure rates than those
with similar tumors treated with standard techniques, either open or robotic,
when treated with an advanced open surgical approach to surgery, called “en
bloc” resection of the prostate.
- Selectively applying either robotic prostatectomy (RALP), open RP or “en
bloc” resection allows the surgeon to individualize the best available
therapies, maximizing cancer cure and quality of life outcomes, depending
on each patient’s unique set of circumstances.
This presentation sparked a thoughtful dialogue amongst the physicians and
experts present regarding the proper role of surgery, including open and
robotic techniques, in the treatment of clinically localized prostate cancer,
and surprising consensus was reached on many key issues. We continue to study
comprehensively every patient treated at the Baylor Prostate Center to keep
our outcomes data as up-to-date as possible so patients can be counseled
using the best available data regarding the choices available to them
Additional Published Information on RALP
- "The Influence Of Increasing Experience And Surgical
Technique On Surgical Margin Status In Patients Undergoing Open And Robotic
Prostatectomy By A Single Surgeon" Submitted to the American Urological Association Meeting, 2006
(60 KB)
-
Soon-to-be published chapter on Robotic Prostatectomy written by Dr. Kevin Slawin
(673 KB)
-
Cornell ART Symposium Aug 2006 Presentation
(2,158
KB)
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