Laparoscopic Pelvic Lymphadenectomy in Prostatic Cancer: An Analysis of Seventy Consecutive Cases

Abstract
From July 1992 to April 1994, 70 patients with prostatic cancer underwent laparoscopic pelvic lymph-node dissection (LPLD) before retropubic radical prostatecomy or afterloading therapy in our clinic. After an initial learning phase, the accuracy of LPLD was excellent, with only 3.0% residual nodes and no false-negative results due to LPLD. The rate of severe complications was 5.7% (4/70). No transfusions were required due to LPLD. If patients with positive nodes (D1) were excluded from local therapy, the benefits of LPLD were estimated as 12 patients with positive nodes avoiding open surgery (17.1 %); 15 patients undergoing afterloading therapy and avoiding open surgery (21.4%); 1 patient with high preoperative prostate-specific antigen having a chance of surgical cure (1.4%) – a total of 28 of 70 patients (40.0%). We conclude that, depending on the therapeutic concept applied, LPLD is beneficial for patients wiht prostatic cancer, it opens the door for other curative procedures like after-loading therapy, and reappraisal of perineal prostatectomy.

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