Laparoscopic radical cystectomy for 43 patients with invasive bladder carcinoma.
- Author:
Zhen-li GAO
1
;
Ji-tao WU
;
Yu-jie LIU
;
Lei SHI
;
Chang-ping MEN
;
Peng ZHANG
;
Qing-zuo LIU
;
Lin WANG
Author Information
- Publication Type:Journal Article
- MeSH: Aged; Cystectomy; methods; Female; Follow-Up Studies; Humans; Laparoscopy; Male; Middle Aged; Treatment Outcome; Urinary Bladder Neoplasms; surgery; Urinary Diversion; methods
- From: Chinese Journal of Surgery 2008;46(8):595-597
- CountryChina
- Language:Chinese
-
Abstract:
OBJECTIVETo report initial experience with laparoscopic radical cystectomy in 43 patients with invasive bladder carcinoma.
METHODSFrom December 2003 to October 2006, 29 men and 14 women underwent laparoscopic radical cystectomy with extracorporeal-assisted urinary diversion for transitional cell carcinoma of the bladder (n=40), adenocarcinoma (n=2) and squamous cell arcinoma (n=1). We report the specific technical details and present initial results of our series.
RESULTSThe mean operative time of laparoscopic radical cystectomy with pelvic lymph node dissection was 195.4 min, the mean blood loss 273.7 ml, and the transfusion rate 6.9%. Two procedures converted to open techniques. Lymphadenectomy detected lymph node metastasis in three patients.
CONCLUSIONSWe demonstrate that the combination of laparoscopic radical cystectomy and extracorporeal urinary diversion is possible and remains a safe, feasible, and repeatable surgical technique. The laparoscopic surgery with extracorporeal urinary reconstruction is emerging as a viable alternative to open radical cystectomy while characterized by less trauma, short recovery time and low complications. Intermediate oncologic outcomes are encouraging and comparable to those of open series. To determine the oncologic outcome long-time follow-up will be necessary.