Imagine having prostate surgery without the big cut in your belly. Now imagine that this smaller incision works just as well as the standard method for keeping cancer away.
That is exactly what a new study shows.
Prostate cancer is common. Many men face surgery to remove the gland. The standard operation, called a retropubic radical prostatectomy, involves a large cut in the lower abdomen.
Doctors have to go through the bladder area to reach the prostate. This means more tissue to move and more time in the operating room.
But there is a frustrating problem. Some men suffer from bigger wounds and more blood loss. They also face a higher risk of infection at the incision site.
The surprising shift
For years, doctors believed the big cut was the only safe way. They thought avoiding the standard approach might mean missing cancer cells.
But here is the twist. A new look at patient data changes that belief.
A specific type of surgery, called a perineal approach, avoids the big belly cut. Instead, the surgeon makes a smaller cut between the scrotum and the anus. This path is shorter and avoids the main blood vessels in the pelvis.
What scientists didn't expect
Think of the body like a busy city. The standard surgery is like driving through the crowded downtown to get somewhere. It works, but it causes traffic jams and spills.
The perineal approach is like taking a back road. It is direct and avoids the main congestion.
In this study, researchers compared the two paths. They looked at how much blood was lost and how well the surgery controlled the cancer.
They also tracked how men felt about their bladder and erections over ten years.
The study snapshot
The team studied 103 men with early-stage prostate cancer. These men had very low risk of cancer spreading to lymph nodes.
They were split into three groups. One group got the perineal surgery. Another got the standard belly cut. The third group got the belly cut plus a lymph node check.
The study followed them for a decade. They checked for cancer returning and how well their bodies recovered.
The results were clear and encouraging. Men who had the perineal surgery lost significantly less blood. In fact, the blood loss was the lowest of all groups.
However, there was a trade-off. Wound infections and drainage issues happened more often with the smaller cut. But these problems were minor and did not cause long-term harm.
The most important news is about cancer control. At one year, 82% of men in the perineal group were cancer-free. At ten years, that number was 71.2%.
The standard surgery did slightly better at one year, but the difference was not statistically significant. By ten years, both methods performed almost identically.
This doesn't mean this treatment is available yet.
Recovery for bladder control improved over time for everyone. By the end of ten years, most men could hold urine normally.
Erectile function recovery was limited for everyone, around 20% to 30%. This was the same for both surgical methods.
The bigger picture
Experts say this fits into a larger goal. Doctors want to give patients the best chance to cure cancer while minimizing side effects.
This study shows that a different surgical path can achieve that balance. It proves that the old belief—that only the big cut is safe—might be outdated.
If you are facing surgery, talk to your doctor about options. Ask if a perineal approach is right for your specific case.
This is not a new treatment available in every hospital. It is still being refined. But the data suggests it is a valid choice for the right patient.
Do not stop your current treatment plan without talking to your care team. Every body is different.
The limitations
This study had a small group of patients. Only 103 men were involved. Also, the researchers only looked at men with very early-stage cancer.
The study also did not include men who needed a lymph node check. This limits how widely we can apply the results right now.
More research is needed. Larger studies with more patients will confirm these findings.
Hospitals will need to train surgeons in this new technique. Once approved and trained, more men might have access to this less invasive option.
Until then, the standard surgery remains the gold standard. But the door is opening for a new path forward.