Laparoscopic cystectomy with extracorporeal-assisted urinary diversion: experience with 34 patients.

Journal: European Urology
Published:
Abstract

Objective: Open radical cystectomy remains the gold standard for nonmetastatic muscle invasive bladder cancer. Laparoscopic cystectomy has been described as a feasible procedure and is still being evaluated. We describe our initial experience with this laparoscopic surgical approach in 34 patients.

Methods: From February 2002 to October 2004, 18 men and 16 women underwent laparoscopic cystectomy with extracorporeal-assisted urinary diversion for transitional cell carcinoma of the bladder (n=27), invasive cervical carcinoma (n=4), and atrophic bladder (n=3). We report here on specific technical details and present initial results of our series.

Results: The mean operating time was 244 min, the mean blood loss 325 ml, and the transfusion rate 5.9%. All procedures were completed laparascopically without conversion to open techniques. No major complications occurred during or after the operation. In case of urothelial malignancy (n=27), the histopathologic analysis of the removed specimen revealed organ-confined transitional cell carcinoma of the bladder in 66.7% (pT1:14.8%; pT2: 51.9%) and locally advanced disease in 33.3% (pT3: 25.9%; pT4: 7.4%). In two cases final histology proved positive surgical margins. Extended lymphadenectomy detected lymph node metastasis in two patients.

Conclusions: We demonstrate that the combination of laparoscopic cystectomy and extracorporeal urinary diversion is possible and remains a safe, feasible, and repeatable surgical technique. To determine the oncologic outcome long-time follow-up will be necessary.

Authors
Holger Gerullis, Christoph Kuemmel, Gralf Popken