Treatment Comparison
Comparing surgery and radiation for prostate cancer
The following table compares outcomes following prostate cancer treatment -- specifically, surgery (radical prostatectomy), which is considered the gold standard treatment for localized prostate cancer -- and radiation (brachytherapy and external beam radiation). Data is provided on survival, cancer recurrence, incidence of rectal and bladder cancer, bowel function, urinary bother and long-term erectile function. In this table, radical prostatectomy includes all approaches to prostate surgery (open surgery through large incisions; conventional minimally invasive, or laparoscopic radical prostatectomy -- also called LRP -- as well as da Vinci Prostatectomy, or dVP). As you can see, surgery offers measurable advantages over radiation in terms of outcomes and survivability.
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Chart 1: Outcome Comparison: Surgery vs. Radiotherapy
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Outcome
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Radical Prostatectomy*
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Radiation**
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Survival duration compared to conservative disease management1
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8.6 years
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4.6 years
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15-year prostate cancer survival rate2
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92%
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87%
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Survival rate for high-grade cancer patients3
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45% increase in overall survival rate vs. radiotherapy
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-
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Risk of cancer-specific death for
high-grade cancer patients4
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49% less risk vs. radiotherapy
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-
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Cancer recurrence5
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Easy to detect
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Difficult to detect
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Risk of rectal cancer
(Within 10 year follow-up) 6
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5.1 out of 1000
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10.0 out of 1000
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Risk of bladder cancer7
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0.8% developed bladder cancer
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1.3% developed bladder cancer
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Bowel function impairment8
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-
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Significantly greater vs. surgery
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Disease-specific long-term quality of life9
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Stable
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Unstable
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Painful urination (at 18 month follow-up) 10
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1% of patients
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30% of patients
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Long-term erectile dysfunction11
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Lower risk
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Higher risk
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*Open surgery; comparable long-term data not yet available on da Vinci® Prostatectomy.
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Comparing open vs. laparoscopic vs. da Vinci Surgery for prostate cancer
The following table looks at patient outcomes following surgery for prostate cancer (radical prostatectomy), and compares "best in class" data from three types of surgery. As you can see, da Vinci Prostatectomy (dVP) shows measurable advantages as compared to both conventional open surgery (open), performed through large incisions, as well as conventional minimally invasive laparoscopic (lap) surgery.
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Chart 2: da Vinci® vs. Open vs. Conventional Laparoscopy
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Outcome
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da Vinci©
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Open
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Lap
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Cancer control
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T2 margin status
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4.51
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5.92
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7.73
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Complications
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Estimated blood loss (EBL)
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109 ml4
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1355 ml5
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380 ml6
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Length of stay (LOS)
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1.2 days4
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3 days5
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2.5 days13
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Major
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1.7%4
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6.7%5
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3.7%6
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Minor
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3.7%4
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12.6%5
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14.6%6
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Urinary function
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3 month
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92.9%7
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54%8
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62%9
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6 month
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94.9%7
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80%8
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77%9
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12 month
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97.4%7
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93%8
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83%9
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Sexual function
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12 month
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86%10
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71%11
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76%12
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References for Chart 1:
References for Chart 2: