European Urology Open Science (Jun 2024)
Urinary and Sexual Impact of Robotic Radical Prostatectomy: Reporting of Patient-reported Outcome Measures in the First Year after Radical Prostatectomy in a Contemporary Multicentre Cohort in the United Kingdom
Abstract
Background and objective: Radical prostatectomy (RP) is an established treatment for localised prostate cancer that can have a significant impact on urinary and sexual function, with recovery over time. Our aim was to describe functional recovery in the first year after RP, reporting descriptive outcomes alongside validated patient-reported outcome measure scores (Expanded Prostate Cancer Index Composite, EPIC-26). Methods: Men undergoing RP between September 2015 and November 2019 completed EPIC-26 at baseline and 1, 3, 6, and 12 mo. Key findings and limitations: Overall, 2030 men consented to participation, underwent RP, and completed EPIC-26. At baseline, 97% were pad-free (1928/1996; 95% confidence interval [CI] 96–97%) and 77% were leak-free and pad-free (1529/1996; 95% CI 75–78), with a median EPIC-26 incontinence domain score of 100 (interquartile range [IQR] 86–100). At 12 mo, 65% were pad-free (904/1388; 95% CI 63–68%) and 42% were leak-free and pad-free (583/1388; 95% CI 39–45%), with a median EPIC-26 score of 76 (IQR 61–100). While one in three men reported wearing a pad at 12 mo, fewer than one in ten men needed more than 1 pad/d. At baseline, 1.9% reported a “moderate or big problem” with urine leakage, which increased to 9.7% at 12 mo. At baseline, the median sexual domain score among 1880 men was 74 (IQR 43–92) and 52% had erections sufficient for intercourse without medication (975/1880; 95% CI 50–54%). Among these 975 men, 630 responded at 12 mo, of whom 17% reported sufficient erections for intercourse (105/630; 95% CI 14–20%), without medication in 6% (37/630; 95% CI 4–8%) and needing medication in 11% (68/630; 95% CI 9–13%); the median EPIC-26 domain score was 26 (IQR 13–57). Conclusions and clinical implications: Reporting of functional outcomes after RP in terms of easily understood concepts such as pad-free and leak-free status, and erections with and with medication, alongside the classical report using EPIC-26 domain scores, increases the understanding of RP recovery patterns over the first year. Patient summary: At 12 months after surgery for prostate cancer, one in ten men reported a moderate or big problem with urine leakage and one in five men reported sufficient erections.