Surgery Overview
A radical prostatectomy is an operation to remove the
prostate gland and some of the tissue around it. It is
done to remove
prostate cancer. This operation may be done by open surgery or by
laparoscopic surgery through small
incisions.
Laparoscopic surgery is most often done by hand. A few doctors now do it by guiding robotic arms that hold the surgery tools. This is called robot-assisted prostatectomy.
Open surgery
In open surgery, the surgeon uses an incision to reach the
prostate gland. Depending on the case, the incision is
made either in the lower belly or in the groin between the anus and the
penis.
When the incision is made in the lower belly, it is called the
retropubic approach. A radical prostatectomy using the retropubic approach is
the most common treatment for prostate cancer. In this procedure, the surgeon
may also remove lymph nodes in the area so that they can be tested for
cancer.1
When the incision is made in the groin, it is called the perineal
approach. The recovery time after this surgery may be shorter than with the
retropubic approach. If the surgeon wants to remove lymph nodes for testing, he
or she must make a separate incision. If the lymph nodes are believed to be
free of cancer based on the
grade of the cancer and results of the
PSA test, the surgeon may skip the lymph node
removal.
Laparoscopic surgery
For laparoscopic surgery, the surgeon makes
several small incisions in the belly. A lighted viewing instrument called a
laparoscope is inserted into one of the incisions. The
surgeon uses special instruments to reach and remove the prostate through the
other incisions.
Men who have laparoscopic surgery tend to lose less blood during
the operation and to recover faster than men who have open surgery.2 Laparoscopic prostatectomy is not yet widely available, and
because it is a relatively new technique, no results from long-term follow-up
after treatment are available.
The main goal of either type of surgery is to remove all the
cancer. Sometimes that means removing the prostate as well as the tissues
around it, including a set of nerves to the penis that affect the man's ability
to have an erection. Some tumors can be removed using a nerve-sparing
technique, which means carefully cutting around those nerves to leave them
intact. Nerve-sparing surgery sometimes preserves the man's ability to have an
erection.
What To Expect After Surgery
Prostatectomy usually requires
general anesthesia and a hospital stay of 2 to 4 days.
A thin, flexible tube called a catheter usually is left in your bladder to drain
your urine for 1 to 3 weeks. Your doctor will give you instructions about
how
to care for your catheter at home. Bladder control can be poor for a few
months after the catheter is removed.
Although prostatectomy often removes all cancer cells, it is important
to receive follow-up care, which may lead to early identification and treatment
if your cancer comes back. Your regular follow-up program may include:
Why It Is Done
Radical prostatectomy is most often used if testing shows that the
cancer has not spread outside the prostate (stages I and II).
Although radical prostatectomy is occasionally used to relieve
urinary obstruction in men with more advanced (stage III) cancer, a different
operation, called a transurethral resection of the
prostate (TURP), is most often used for that
purpose. Surgery usually is not considered a cure for advanced cancer, but it
can help relieve symptoms.
How Well It Works
Radical prostatectomy is generally effective in treating prostate
cancer that has not spread. This is called early-stage
cancer. Following surgery, the stage of the cancer can be determined
based on how far it has spread. PSA levels will drop almost to zero if the
surgery successfully removes the cancer and the cancer has not spread. If
cancer has spread, advanced cancer may develop even after the prostate has been
removed.
Compared with
watchful waiting for early-stage cancer, radical
prostatectomy lowers the risk that the cancer will grow or spread. And it
lowers the long-term risks of death from cancer.3
This is important to know if you expect to live 10 or more years. (If you are
already in poor health or are in your later years and you have an early-stage prostate cancer, it
may not grow or spread during your lifetime.)
Risks
Erection problems
Up to 80% of men experience erection problems after a
prostatectomy.4 The nerves that control a man's
ability to have an erection lie next to the prostate gland. They often are
damaged or removed during surgery. In the months and years after surgery, most
men who had erection problems after prostatectomy are able to regain their
ability to have erections:5
- 76% of men younger than 60
- 56% of
men age 60 to 65
- 47% of men older than 65
Recovery depends on:5
- Whether the man was able to have an erection
before surgery.
- How the surgery affected the nerves that control
erections.
- How old the man was at the time of surgery.
Urinary incontinence
Up to half of all men who have a radical prostatectomy develop
urinary incontinence, ranging from a need to wear
urinary incontinence pads to occasional dribbling. Studies show that one year
later, between 15% and 50% of men report urinary problems.4
The urethra—the tube that carries urine from your bladder—runs
through the middle of the doughnut-shaped prostate gland. In order to remove
the prostate, the surgeon must cut the urethra and later reconnect it to the
bladder. Evidence shows that the greater the surgeon's experience and skill in
making this reconnection, the lower the rate of incontinence.6
Some men may require treatment for incontinence after
prostatectomy, if urinary leakage continues longer than 1 year.
Complications
Radical prostatectomy is major surgery, so it carries the same
general risks as other major operations, including heart problems,
blood clots, allergic reaction to anesthesia, blood
loss, and infection of the wound.
These additional complications can be caused by radical
prostatectomy:
- Erection problems
- Urinary
incontinence
- Damage to the
urethra
- Damage to the rectum
What To Think About
A surgeon who is new to laparoscopy can take 80 to 100 surgeries before mastering prostatectomy.7 Before choosing the surgeon and type of surgery you will have, look for a surgeon with the most experience and surgery success. This can help lower your risks of problems after surgery.
When considering prostatectomy, take into account your personal
wishes, age, other medical conditions you may have, the
stage and
grade of your cancer, and your PSA level. Radiation
treatment or watching and waiting may be reasonable alternatives.
Robot-assisted prostatectomy may be best suited to a younger man in good health with a small prostate and a small, lower-grade cancer. This technology is not yet widely used.
Surgery may completely remove your prostate cancer. However, it is
not possible to know ahead of time whether the cancer has spread beyond the
prostate and is not curable with surgery alone.
Prostate cancer often spreads to the nerves that surround the
prostate. These nerves control a man's ability to have an erection. When the
nerves are removed along with the cancer, the man will most likely have
erection problems. A nerve graft sometimes may be done to reduce this chance.
For this, the surgeon removes part of a nerve that goes down the back of the
leg and attaches it to the nerves where the prostate gland was. This surgery
seems to be helpful for some men, but not for all. More research is needed to
see how well this surgery works to preserve the man's ability to have an
erection.
Complete the
surgery information form (PDF)
(What is a PDF document?)
to help you prepare for this surgery.