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Patients Regret Their Choice of Therapy Significantly Less Frequently after Robot-Assisted Radical Prostatectomy as Opposed to Open Radical Prostatectomy: Patient-Reported Results of the Multicenter Cross-Sectional IMPROVE Study

SIMPLE SUMMARY: This multicenter study investigated the extent of patient’s decision regret (PatR) in patients with prostate cancer comparing different surgical modalities. Robot-assisted radical prostatectomy has replaced open radical prostatectomy as the surgical standard of care in many countries...

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Autores principales: Wolff, Ingmar, Burchardt, Martin, Gilfrich, Christian, Peter, Julia, Baunacke, Martin, Thomas, Christian, Huber, Johannes, Gillitzer, Rolf, Sikic, Danijel, Fiebig, Christian, Steinestel, Julie, Schifano, Paola, Löbig, Niklas, Bolenz, Christian, Distler, Florian A., Huettenbrink, Clemens, Janssen, Maximilian, Schilling, David, Barakat, Bara, Harke, Nina N., Fuhrmann, Christian, Manseck, Andreas, Wagenhoffer, Robert, Geist, Ekkehard, Blair, Lisa, Pfitzenmaier, Jesco, Reinhardt, Bettina, Hoschke, Bernd, Burger, Maximilian, Bründl, Johannes, Schnabel, Marco J., May, Matthias
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9654391/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36358775
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cancers14215356
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author Wolff, Ingmar
Burchardt, Martin
Gilfrich, Christian
Peter, Julia
Baunacke, Martin
Thomas, Christian
Huber, Johannes
Gillitzer, Rolf
Sikic, Danijel
Fiebig, Christian
Steinestel, Julie
Schifano, Paola
Löbig, Niklas
Bolenz, Christian
Distler, Florian A.
Huettenbrink, Clemens
Janssen, Maximilian
Schilling, David
Barakat, Bara
Harke, Nina N.
Fuhrmann, Christian
Manseck, Andreas
Wagenhoffer, Robert
Geist, Ekkehard
Blair, Lisa
Pfitzenmaier, Jesco
Reinhardt, Bettina
Hoschke, Bernd
Burger, Maximilian
Bründl, Johannes
Schnabel, Marco J.
May, Matthias
author_facet Wolff, Ingmar
Burchardt, Martin
Gilfrich, Christian
Peter, Julia
Baunacke, Martin
Thomas, Christian
Huber, Johannes
Gillitzer, Rolf
Sikic, Danijel
Fiebig, Christian
Steinestel, Julie
Schifano, Paola
Löbig, Niklas
Bolenz, Christian
Distler, Florian A.
Huettenbrink, Clemens
Janssen, Maximilian
Schilling, David
Barakat, Bara
Harke, Nina N.
Fuhrmann, Christian
Manseck, Andreas
Wagenhoffer, Robert
Geist, Ekkehard
Blair, Lisa
Pfitzenmaier, Jesco
Reinhardt, Bettina
Hoschke, Bernd
Burger, Maximilian
Bründl, Johannes
Schnabel, Marco J.
May, Matthias
author_sort Wolff, Ingmar
collection PubMed
description SIMPLE SUMMARY: This multicenter study investigated the extent of patient’s decision regret (PatR) in patients with prostate cancer comparing different surgical modalities. Robot-assisted radical prostatectomy has replaced open radical prostatectomy as the surgical standard of care in many countries worldwide. However, a broad scientific basis evaluating the difference in patient-relevant outcomes between both approaches is still lacking. In this context, PatR is increasingly moving into the scientific focus. Our study shows a critical PatR in slightly more than one third of patients about 15 months after surgery. Patients who underwent robot-assisted surgery, and also patients without postoperative urinary stress incontinence, report significantly lower PatR. Likewise, this difference was also demonstrated for patients who decided together with their treating physician on the specific surgical procedure (consensual decision making). Our study helps to further establish PatR as an important endpoint in the setting of radical prostatectomy and identifies criteria which may be addressed to reduce PatR. ABSTRACT: Patient’s regret (PatR) concerning the choice of therapy represents a crucial endpoint for treatment evaluation after radical prostatectomy (RP) for prostate cancer (PCA). This study aims to compare PatR following robot-assisted (RARP) and open surgical approach (ORP). A survey comprising perioperative-functional criteria was sent to 1000 patients in 20 German centers at a median of 15 months after RP. Surgery-related items were collected from participating centers. To calculate PatR differences between approaches, a multivariate regressive base model (MVBM) was established incorporating surgical approach and demographic, center-specific, and tumor-specific criteria not primarily affected by surgical approach. An extended model (MVEM) was further adjusted by variables potentially affected by surgical approach. PatR was based on five validated questions ranging 0–100 (cutoff >15 defined as critical PatR). The response rate was 75.0%. After exclusion of patients with laparoscopic RP or stage M1b/c, the study cohort comprised 277/365 ORP/RARP patients. ORP/RARP patients had a median PatR of 15/10 (p < 0.001) and 46.2%/28.1% had a PatR >15, respectively (p < 0.001). Based on the MVBM, RARP patients showed PatR >15 relative 46.8% less frequently (p < 0.001). Consensual decision making regarding surgical approach independently reduced PatR. With the MVEM, the independent impact of both surgical approach and of consensual decision making was confirmed. This study involving centers of different care levels showed significantly lower PatR following RARP.
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spelling pubmed-96543912022-11-15 Patients Regret Their Choice of Therapy Significantly Less Frequently after Robot-Assisted Radical Prostatectomy as Opposed to Open Radical Prostatectomy: Patient-Reported Results of the Multicenter Cross-Sectional IMPROVE Study Wolff, Ingmar Burchardt, Martin Gilfrich, Christian Peter, Julia Baunacke, Martin Thomas, Christian Huber, Johannes Gillitzer, Rolf Sikic, Danijel Fiebig, Christian Steinestel, Julie Schifano, Paola Löbig, Niklas Bolenz, Christian Distler, Florian A. Huettenbrink, Clemens Janssen, Maximilian Schilling, David Barakat, Bara Harke, Nina N. Fuhrmann, Christian Manseck, Andreas Wagenhoffer, Robert Geist, Ekkehard Blair, Lisa Pfitzenmaier, Jesco Reinhardt, Bettina Hoschke, Bernd Burger, Maximilian Bründl, Johannes Schnabel, Marco J. May, Matthias Cancers (Basel) Article SIMPLE SUMMARY: This multicenter study investigated the extent of patient’s decision regret (PatR) in patients with prostate cancer comparing different surgical modalities. Robot-assisted radical prostatectomy has replaced open radical prostatectomy as the surgical standard of care in many countries worldwide. However, a broad scientific basis evaluating the difference in patient-relevant outcomes between both approaches is still lacking. In this context, PatR is increasingly moving into the scientific focus. Our study shows a critical PatR in slightly more than one third of patients about 15 months after surgery. Patients who underwent robot-assisted surgery, and also patients without postoperative urinary stress incontinence, report significantly lower PatR. Likewise, this difference was also demonstrated for patients who decided together with their treating physician on the specific surgical procedure (consensual decision making). Our study helps to further establish PatR as an important endpoint in the setting of radical prostatectomy and identifies criteria which may be addressed to reduce PatR. ABSTRACT: Patient’s regret (PatR) concerning the choice of therapy represents a crucial endpoint for treatment evaluation after radical prostatectomy (RP) for prostate cancer (PCA). This study aims to compare PatR following robot-assisted (RARP) and open surgical approach (ORP). A survey comprising perioperative-functional criteria was sent to 1000 patients in 20 German centers at a median of 15 months after RP. Surgery-related items were collected from participating centers. To calculate PatR differences between approaches, a multivariate regressive base model (MVBM) was established incorporating surgical approach and demographic, center-specific, and tumor-specific criteria not primarily affected by surgical approach. An extended model (MVEM) was further adjusted by variables potentially affected by surgical approach. PatR was based on five validated questions ranging 0–100 (cutoff >15 defined as critical PatR). The response rate was 75.0%. After exclusion of patients with laparoscopic RP or stage M1b/c, the study cohort comprised 277/365 ORP/RARP patients. ORP/RARP patients had a median PatR of 15/10 (p < 0.001) and 46.2%/28.1% had a PatR >15, respectively (p < 0.001). Based on the MVBM, RARP patients showed PatR >15 relative 46.8% less frequently (p < 0.001). Consensual decision making regarding surgical approach independently reduced PatR. With the MVEM, the independent impact of both surgical approach and of consensual decision making was confirmed. This study involving centers of different care levels showed significantly lower PatR following RARP. MDPI 2022-10-30 /pmc/articles/PMC9654391/ /pubmed/36358775 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cancers14215356 Text en © 2022 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Wolff, Ingmar
Burchardt, Martin
Gilfrich, Christian
Peter, Julia
Baunacke, Martin
Thomas, Christian
Huber, Johannes
Gillitzer, Rolf
Sikic, Danijel
Fiebig, Christian
Steinestel, Julie
Schifano, Paola
Löbig, Niklas
Bolenz, Christian
Distler, Florian A.
Huettenbrink, Clemens
Janssen, Maximilian
Schilling, David
Barakat, Bara
Harke, Nina N.
Fuhrmann, Christian
Manseck, Andreas
Wagenhoffer, Robert
Geist, Ekkehard
Blair, Lisa
Pfitzenmaier, Jesco
Reinhardt, Bettina
Hoschke, Bernd
Burger, Maximilian
Bründl, Johannes
Schnabel, Marco J.
May, Matthias
Patients Regret Their Choice of Therapy Significantly Less Frequently after Robot-Assisted Radical Prostatectomy as Opposed to Open Radical Prostatectomy: Patient-Reported Results of the Multicenter Cross-Sectional IMPROVE Study
title Patients Regret Their Choice of Therapy Significantly Less Frequently after Robot-Assisted Radical Prostatectomy as Opposed to Open Radical Prostatectomy: Patient-Reported Results of the Multicenter Cross-Sectional IMPROVE Study
title_full Patients Regret Their Choice of Therapy Significantly Less Frequently after Robot-Assisted Radical Prostatectomy as Opposed to Open Radical Prostatectomy: Patient-Reported Results of the Multicenter Cross-Sectional IMPROVE Study
title_fullStr Patients Regret Their Choice of Therapy Significantly Less Frequently after Robot-Assisted Radical Prostatectomy as Opposed to Open Radical Prostatectomy: Patient-Reported Results of the Multicenter Cross-Sectional IMPROVE Study
title_full_unstemmed Patients Regret Their Choice of Therapy Significantly Less Frequently after Robot-Assisted Radical Prostatectomy as Opposed to Open Radical Prostatectomy: Patient-Reported Results of the Multicenter Cross-Sectional IMPROVE Study
title_short Patients Regret Their Choice of Therapy Significantly Less Frequently after Robot-Assisted Radical Prostatectomy as Opposed to Open Radical Prostatectomy: Patient-Reported Results of the Multicenter Cross-Sectional IMPROVE Study
title_sort patients regret their choice of therapy significantly less frequently after robot-assisted radical prostatectomy as opposed to open radical prostatectomy: patient-reported results of the multicenter cross-sectional improve study
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9654391/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36358775
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cancers14215356
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