Prostatic Artery Embolization for The Treatment of Benign Prostatic Obstruction - A Retrospective Review of The Novel Experience Of 2 Tertiary Urology Centers
Mohamad Fairuz Mohamad Sharin, A. Jagwani, Razaleigh Yusof, F. Y. Lee, Anas Tharek, Kheng Siang Christopher Lee, S. A. Mohd Zainuddin, A. Arunasalam, Ridzuan Abdul Rahim, Ezamin Abdul Rahim, K. A. Mohd Ghani
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background: Benign Prostatic Hyperplasia (BPH) is common in aging men with worldwide prevalence at 20-62%, while Malaysian prevalence was 39.3% (2001) and increased at 8% per decade. In surgical treatment of BPH, Trans-Urethral Resection of Prostate (TURP) remains the gold standard. Other surgical options would mostly also require general anesthesia (GA). Therefore, more Local-Anaesthesia (LA) based options should be made available for patients who are not fit or unwilling to be under GA. Those currently available LA-based procedure has shown promising results including prostatic stents and trans-urethral lifts, but have drawbacks due to being expensive, not widely available, less suitable in median lobe enlargement or may cause complications including migration, overgrowth of prostatic tissue or foreign-body related complications which may require GA for their treatment. Prostatic Artery Embolization (PAE), initially an LA-based emergency treatment option for persistent life-threatening hematuria from a bleeding BPH, now has been proven to be a safe elective treatment. In Malaysia this novel technique was first reported in 2017 for treatment of post TURP intractable hematuria.
Methods and Material: We retrospectively evaluated all 13 catheter-dependent BPH patients in two tertiary urology centres treated with PAE from April 2019 until December 2021 to assess post-treatment efficacy.
Results: One patient failed removal of catheter within 3 months post-procedure but 12 out of 13 patients safely got their catheter removed within 1-3 months and resulted in significant IPSS improvement.
Conclusion: PAE is a safe and effective treatment option for BPH patients of the Malaysian population but needs prospective evaluation.