Back to Search Start Over

Hospital volume and outcomes after radical prostatectomy: a national population-based study using patient-reported urinary continence and sexual function

Authors :
Nossiter, Julie
Morris, Melanie
Cowling, Thomas E
Parry, Matthew G
Sujenthiran, Arunan
Aggarwal, Ajay
Payne, Heather
van der Meulen, Jan
Clarke, Noel W
Cathcart, Paul
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2021.

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Improvements in short-term outcomes have been reported for hospitals with higher radical prostatectomy (RP) volumes. However, the association with longer-term functional outcomes is unknown. METHODS: All patients diagnosed with non-metastatic prostate cancer in the English NHS between 2014 and 2016 who underwent RP (N = 10,089) were mailed a survey ≥18 months after diagnosis. Differences in patient-reported urinary continence and sexual function (EPIC-26 on scale from 0 to 100) by hospital volume group (≤60, 61-100, 101-140, >140 RPs/year) were estimated using multilevel linear regression. RESULTS: Overall, 7702 men (76.3%) responded. There were no statistically significant differences in urinary continence (p = 0.08) or sexual function scores with increasing volume group (p = 0.2). When modelled as a linear function, we found a non-significant increase of 0.70 (95% CI -0.41 to 1.80; p = 0.22) in urinary continence and a significant increase of 1.54 (0.62-2.45; p = 0.001) in sexual function scores for a 100-procedure increase in hospital volume, which did not meet the threshold for a minimal clinically important difference (10-12 points). The results were similar for robotic-assisted RP (5529 men [71.8%]). CONCLUSIONS: These results do not support further centralisation of RP services beyond levels in England where four in five hospitals perform >60 RPs/year.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
13657852
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.core.ac.uk....492757a549814e5fa14340170f3c1eed