Background: Extended pelvic lymph node dissection (ePLND) remains the most accurate procedure for lymph node staging in intermediate- and high-risk prostate cancer (PCa) patients undergoing radical prostatectomy (RP). A superextended pelvic lymph node dissection (sePLND) can be considered in selected very-high-risk PCa patients.
Objective: To demonstrate a reproducible robot-assisted technique for sePLND at the time of RP for PCa.
Design, setting, and participants: From June 2016 to August 2019, 41 consecutive patients with localized PCa and very high risk for lymph node invasion (LNI) received a robot-assisted RP and a standardized 10-step monoblock ePLND, followed by a 5-step monoblock sePLND. Very high risk for LNI was defined as ≥30% risk for LNI, as calculated by the Briganti 2017 nomogram.
Surgical procedure: After performing the ePLND template resection (harvesting lymph nodes from the obturator region, external and internal iliac vessels, and common iliac vessels up to the ureter crossing), the 5-step monoblock sePLND approach was performed. The sePLND template was tailored to the common iliac vessels up to the aortic and caval bifurcation as well as the presacral region.
Measurements: Lymph node yield, perioperative complications.
Results and limitations: Overall, 41 patients received sePLND, reporting a median (interquartile range [IQR]) number of nodes removed of 23 (19-29). Median operative time (including RP, ePLND, and sePLND) was 256 min. Median preoperative prostate-specific antigen was 12 ng/mL (IQR 6.45-17.6). Disease stage pT <3 was found in 10 (24.4%) patients, pT3a in nine (22%) patients, pT3b in 21 (51.2%) patients, and pT4 in one (2.4%) patient. Of the treated patients, 54% revealed LNI: five (4.9%) in a solitary node, five (4.9%) in two to five nodes, and 12 (29.3%) in more than five nodes. Considering perioperative complications, three (7.3%) patients experienced Clavien I-II and four (9.7%) experienced Clavien ≥ III complications. Median hospital stay was 6 d. No patient underwent postoperative blood transfusion.
Conclusions: The 5-step sePLND approach is a reproducible and feasible technique for PCa patients at a very high risk of LNI.
Patient summary: In our study, we aimed to provide surgeons with a step-by-step technique for lymph node dissection, which aims to collect possibly metastatic lymph nodes of prostate cancer in an even more extended version ("superextended") than a standard ("extended") lymph node dissection.
Keywords: Monoblock technique; Prostate cancer; Robot-assisted radical prostatectomy; Superextended pelvic node dissection.
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