The emergence and subsequent rapid uptake of robotic radical prostatectomy has changed the face of prostate cancer care in the United States (US). Aggressive direct-to-consumer marketing by hospitals and the surgical robot manufacturer have helped create a demand for robotic prostate surgery, despite studies showing little benefit in functional or oncologic outcomes of robotic over open radical prostatectomy.1-3 Currently, the majority of all radical prostatectomies performed in the US are done robotically, with 2009 estimates ranging from 69% to 85%. 4,5 This shift in prostatectomy practice patterns has had substantial collateral effects, likely impacting the delivery, access, and cost of prostate cancer care.Using 2000 through 2009 inpatient discharge data from three northeastern states, Stitzenberg et al 6 examined how the uptake of robotic surgery has influenced centralization of prostate cancer surgery and affected travel distances for patients seeking prostate cancer surgery. Their hypotheses were borne out by their data analysis. The most dramatic increases in radical prostatectomy volume were centralized at high-volume centers offering robotic surgery, and the proportion of patients traveling at least 15 miles for radical prostatectomy nearly doubled during the study period. Furthermore, these authors found that the total number of radical prostatectomies performed annually for hospitals studied in the tri-state region of New York, New Jersey, and Pennsylvania increased from 8115 in 2000 to 10,241 in 2009 (26%); during the same time frame, the number of hospitals performing radical prostatectomy decreased from 390 in 2000 to 244 in 2009 (37%). The substantial increases in surgical volume were seen almost exclusively at very high-volume centers (classified as such based on their year 2000 prostatectomy volume numbers [>105/y]) with robotic capacity. The odds of having surgery at a very high-volume hospital increased approximately 6-fold (odds ratio, 6.04; 95% confidence interval, 5.74-6.37) during the study. As the authors point out, the centralization of radical prostatectomy is likely multifactorial. However, their work and the work of others show that robotic surgery uptake potentiates the centralization of prostate cancer care and has likely influenced its delivery, access, and cost.