Imagine facing a major surgery to remove cancer, only to find your previous surgery made the current one more complex. This study asks exactly that question for men who had a Holmium Laser Enucleation of the Prostate (HoLEP) before needing a Robot-Assisted Radical Prostatectomy (RARP). The team compared these men to others who had their first surgery without prior HoLEP. They looked closely at how long the operation took, how much blood was lost, and how quickly patients could go home. The findings were clear: prior HoLEP made the current surgery take significantly longer and increased the need for rebuilding the bladder neck connection.
beyond the numbers, the story is about recovery and peace of mind. Patients with prior HoLEP also kept their catheters in for nearly half a day longer than the other group. Yet, the most important parts of the story remained unchanged. The cancer was removed just as effectively, the stage of the disease found in the tissue was the same, and recovery of bladder control and sexual function did not differ between the two groups. These are the outcomes that matter most to patients living with prostate cancer.
However, we must be honest about what this data can and cannot tell us. The study combined only three past reports involving just sixty-three men who had the prior surgery. This small group limits what we can confidently say about all patients. Because the data comes from past records rather than a planned experiment, we cannot be certain that the prior surgery caused these specific delays. While the practice relevance suggests surgeons should expect these challenges, the evidence is not yet strong enough to change how we treat every patient.