Associate Editor
Ash Tewari
Editorial Board
Ralph Clayman, USA
Inderbir Gill, USA
Roger Kirby, UK
Mani Menon, USA
OBJECTIVE
To report a prospective, controlled, non‐randomized patient study to determine the systemic response to extraperitoneal laparoscopic (eLRP) and open retropubic radical prostatectomy (RRP).
PATIENTS AND METHODS
In all, 403 patients who had eLRP (163) or open RRP (240) were recruited; patients in both groups had similar preoperative staging. In addition to peri‐operative variables (operative duration, complications, blood loss, transfusion rate, hospitalization, catheterization), oncological data (Gleason score, pathological stage, positive margins) were also compared. The extent of the systemic response to surgery‐induced tissue trauma was measured in all patients, by assessing the levels of acute‐phase markers C‐reactive protein (CRP), serum amyloid A (SAA), interleukin‐6 (IL‐6) and IL‐10 before, during and after RP.
RESULTS
The duration of surgery, transfusion rate, hospital stay and duration of catheterization were comparable with those in previous studies. There was an increase in IL‐6, CRP and SAA but no change in IL‐10, and no differences between eLRP and RRP over the entire period assessed.
CONCLUSION
The invasiveness of eLRP could not be substantiated objectively based on the variables measured in this study. The surgical trauma and associated invasiveness of both methods were equivalent.
OBJECTIVE
To improve the orthotopic murine bladder cancer model by using bioluminescent (BL) MB49 tumour cells for noninvasive in vivo monitoring of tumour growth and to examine the efficacy of integrin receptor‐blocking oligopeptides on preventing tumour cell adhesion in this improved bladder cancer model.
MATERIALS AND METHODS
The capacity of oligopeptide combinations to interfere with tumour cell adhesion was assessed in vivo in a syngeneic, orthotopic, murine bladder cancer model. Tumour outgrowth was monitored noninvasively by bioluminescence imaging (BLI) after administration of luciferase‐expressing MB49LUC bladder cancer cells. The presence of tumour cells was verified histologically and immunohistochemically on paraffin wax‐embedded sections of excised bladders.
RESULTS
Anti‐adhesive oligopeptides effectively inhibited tumour outgrowth. BLI detected tumour cells at an early stage when there were no clinical signs of cancer in any of the mice. The technique has high sensitivity in detecting tumour cell implantation, but is less reliable in assessing tumour volume in advanced‐stage disease due to light attenuation in large tumours.
CONCLUSIONS
Peptides targeting adhesion molecules prevent attachment of bladder cancer cells to the injured bladder wall. BLI is a sensitive method for detecting luminescent bladder cancer cells in an orthotopic mouse model.
before and after surgery, and outcomes, were compared.
RESULTSThe operative duration was 165 min for nsLRP and 120 min for nsRRP. Although the nsLRP group had a lower frequency of positive margins, the difference was not statistically significant. At 1 year after surgery, complete continence was reported in 97% of patients who had nsLRP and in 91% who had nsRRP ( P = 0.03). At that time, 66% of patients in the nsLRP and 51% in the nsRRP group reported being able to engage in sexual intercourse ( P < 0.05). There were no statistical differences in surgical trauma in both groups.
CONCLUSIONOur study showed that nsLRP performed by expert surgeons results in better functional outcomes for continence and potency than for nsRRP. There was no significant difference between the surgical techniques in surgical trauma.
KEYWORDSbilateral intrafascial nerve-sparing radical prostatectomy, surgical trauma, outcomes, continence recovery, potency Study Type -Therapy (case series) Level of Evidence 4
Combining oligopeptides with various specificities significantly inhibited tumor cell adhesion and tumor outgrowth. Application of this principle in a clinical setting may be an effective method for reducing the recurrence rate of superficial bladder cancer.
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