AI Article Synopsis

  • The study aimed to evaluate how the COVID-19 pandemic influenced the outcomes of robot-assisted radical prostatectomy (RARP) and urologists' treatment practices.
  • Researchers analyzed medical records of 208 patients who underwent RARP between 2017 and 2022, comparing data from pre-pandemic and pandemic periods, focusing on factors like preoperative hormone therapy, waiting times, and cancer pathology.
  • Results showed a significant increase in preoperative androgen deprivation therapy during the pandemic, shorter waiting periods for surgery, and a shift towards treating more high-risk patients, but no overall negative impact on cancer outcomes or patients' quality of life.

Article Abstract

Objectives: To assess whether the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic affected the outcomes of robot-assisted radical prostatectomy (RARP) and urologists' treatment behaviors.

Methods: We retrospectively examined the medical records of 208 patients who had undergone RARP between August 2017 and December 2022. We compared the rate of preoperative androgen deprivation therapy (ADT), waiting period for RARP, patients' baseline characteristics and quality of life (QOL), proportion of adverse pathology on the RARP specimen, rate of Gleason grade group upgrading from biopsy to the RARP specimen, and prostate-specific antigen (PSA) recurrence-free survival between the pre-pandemic and pandemic groups.

Results: The rate of preoperative ADT was significantly higher during than before the COVID-19 pandemic (13.7% vs. 1.9%; p = 0.002). The baseline physical and mental QOL scores did not differ significantly between the groups. The proportion of D'Amico low-risk patients was significantly lower (13.6% vs. 1.2%, p = 0.005) and waiting period for RARP was significantly shorter (median 3.5 months vs. 4.0 months, p = 0.016) in the pandemic group than in the pre-pandemic group. There was no significant difference in the proportion of adverse pathology between the groups (p = 0.104); however, the upgrading rate was significantly higher in the pre-pandemic group (p = 0.002). There was no significant difference in PSA recurrence-free survival between the groups (log-rank, p = 0.752).

Conclusions: The COVID-19 pandemic did not adversely affect the oncologic outcomes of RARP and QOL before RARP. However, it caused urologists to increase the use of preoperative ADT and to reserve RARP for higher-risk cases.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/iju.15479DOI Listing

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