In a pilot study, water vapor therapy (RezumTM, Boston Scientific Corporation, Marlborough, MA) was proposed as a minimally invasive procedure for benign prostatic hyperplasia, but often requiring oral ± intravenous sedation or a transrectal prostatic block. Therefore, pain management during Rezum therapy remains a challenge and may lead to the use of pain control protocols and general anesthesia, limiting in some ways the concept of a minimally invasive ambulatory surgical approach. The Schelin® catheter (ProstaLund AB, Lund, Sweden), approved by the European Medicines Agency, is a device for injecting analgesic drugs directly into the prostate via the trans-urethral route, providing more effective local anesthesia and avoiding the need for transrectal route or general anesthesia. This catheter is therefore of crucial importance in offering to our patients an ultra-minimally invasive treatment, associated with a reduction in room occupancy time, outpatient surgery time, a procedure performed independently of the anesthesia team, and for the patient, an accelerated post-operative recovery. Our hypothesis is that the REZUM procedure under local anesthesia could be associated with a \>20% reduction in operating room occupancy time compared to procedures performed under general anesthesia.
Benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH) is a common age-related pathology, affecting almost one in three men over the age of 50. It is responsible for voiding disorders in men, which can significantly impair quality of life. Briefly, drug treatment is currently used as first-line therapy; in the event of primary or secondary failure, surgery may be indicated. Over the past 25 years, a number of minimally invasive surgical therapies (MIST) have been developed for the treatment of male voiding disorders associated with BPH. MIST should enable rapid and lasting improvement in symptoms and quality of life, preservation of sexual function in contrast to conventional surgical techniques, rapid return to normal daily activity, and a minimal side-effect profile, thus enabling outpatient management. One of the many advantages of these techniques is to avoid the need for general anaesthesia, both for the growing cohort of elderly patients and for younger patients wishing to return to work quickly. In its pilot study, water vapor thermal therapy (RezumTM, Boston Scientific Corporation, Marlborough, MA) was proposed as a minimally invasive procedure, but often requiring oral ± intravenous sedation or a transrectal prostatic block. Therefore, pain management during Rezum therapy remains a challenge and may lead to the use of pain control protocols and general anesthesia, in some ways limiting the concept of a minimally invasive ambulatory surgery approach. In addition, the use of general anesthesia requires the presence of a dedicated anesthesia team, and adds to the burden of the patient journey (pre-operative anesthesia consultation, exposure to anesthetic drugs, passage to recovery room, slower post-operative recovery). From a surgical point of view, recourse to general anesthesia during Rezum treatment adds to an already saturated operative schedule, with significantly increased room occupancy time, for a Rezum therapy whose average operating time is 5 minutes. The Schelin® catheter (ProstaLund AB, Lund, Sweden), approved by the European Medicines Agency, is a device for injecting analgesic drugs directly into the prostate via the transurethral route, providing more effective local anesthesia and avoiding the need for transrectal or general anesthesia. This catheter is therefore of crucial use in offering our patients an ultra-minimally invasive treatment, which can be associated with a reduction in room occupancy time, time spent in outpatient surgery, a procedure performed independently of the anesthesia team, and for the patient, an accelerated post-operative recovery. By delivering the Rezum treatment via the Schelin catheter, our hypothesis is a significant reduction (\>20%) in room occupancy time in the operating room, associated with accelerated post-operative recovery for the patient.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
24
Water vapor procedure will be performe under conscious intravenous sedation with anesthesia team
Water vapor procedure will be performe under local anethesia administrated with Schelin® catheter via the trans-urethral route : injection of 20cc of lidocaine 2% intra-prostatically via the schelin catheter at 4 injection points (3cc at 1h, 3cc at 11h, 7cc at 4h, and 7cc at 8h).
Service d'urologie, Hôpital Nord (AP-HM)
Marseille, France
RECRUITINGComparison of the operating room occupancy time between the 2 groups
Operating room occupancy time during REZUM procedure
Time frame: Visit 2: surgery
Comparison of the quality of recovery after surgery between the 2 groups
Quality of recovery-15 scores (QoR-15)
Time frame: 24h after surgery
Comparison of the pain post-surgery between the 2 groups
Numerical pain rating scale (0-10)
Time frame: 1 hour, 2 hours and 24 hours after surgery
Success rate of the local anesthesia for the REZUM procedure
* Number of patients with intraoperative anesthesia changes * Numerical pain rating scale (0-10) during surgery
Time frame: intraoperative
Comparison of functional results between the 2 groups
urinary function assessment: * International Prostate Symptom Score * International Prostate Symptom Score - Quality of Life * Uriflometry (Qmax) Sexual function assessment: * International Index of Erectile Function * Male Sexual Health Questionnaire
Time frame: 3 months post-surgery
Comparison of the average number of side-effects post-surgery between the 2 groups
Post-operative side effects reported using the Clavien-Dindo classification
Time frame: 30 days post-surgery
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