Paper 13293-10
Benefits of holmium laser enucleation of the prostate (HOLEP) over transurethral resection (TURP) for bladder outlet obstruction (BOO) in patients with prostate cancer: a propensity score-matched evaluation for optimum palliative care
25 January 2025 • 1:50 PM - 2:10 PM PST | Moscone Center, Room 301 (Level 3 South)
Abstract
Background:
Demographic shift in industrial societies leads to increasing numbers of patients presenting with BOO due to locally advanced prostate cancer. As there is currently no guidelines recommendation on technique, we compared intraoperative performance, postoperative outcomes, and safety for palliative (p)TURP and (p)HoLEP.
Methods:
Retrospective, propensity score-matched analysis of 1,373 and 2,705 men who underwent TURP or HoLEP for LUTS/BOO between 2014 and 2021. Patients were stratified by technique, and groups were compared for perioperative parameters, safety, and short-term functional outcomes.
Results:
Postoperative symptoms and urodynamic parameters improved irrespective of technique. With significantly increased resection and enucleation times for palliative indication, the benefits of HoLEP remain unchallenged by TURP. For corresponding efficiency parameters, we observed a two-fold higher surgical performance (g/min) for both techniques in patients without prostate cancer.
Conclusions:
While laser enucleation of the prostate is a safe and effective procedure, pHoLEP offers better surgical performance compared to pTURP.
Presenter
Alexander Tamalunas
Klinikum der Univ. München (Germany)
Alexander Tamalunas is an Assistant Professor of Urology and currently employed as urology specialist and senior physician at the Department of Urology (chair: Prof. Dr. Christian G. Stief), University Hospital Munich, Munich, Germany. He studied medicine at Ludwig-Maximilians-University Munich, is a licensed Doctor of Medicine in Germany and the U.S. (ECFMG certified M.D.), and obtained his postdoctoral lecture qualification in 2021. With multiple intramural fundings for young researchers from Ludwig-Maximilians-University, and a scholarship of the German Association of Urology (DGU, “Eisenberger-Stipendium”), Dr. Tamalunas has initiated a research group in the department of urology, focusing on basic science, with an emphasis on pharmacology and physiology of the lower urinary tract and translational Uro-Oncology, evidenced by several publications, and paralleled by successful clinical research activities.