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Establishment of novel intraoperative monitoring and mapping method for the cavernous nerve during robot-assisted radical prostatectomy: Results of the phase I/II, first-in-human, feasibility Study

  • Won Hoon Song,
  • Ju Hyun Park,
  • Bum Sik Tae,
  • Sung-Min Kim,
  • Min Hur,
  • Jeong-Hwa Seo,
  • Ja Hyeon Ku,
  • Cheol Kwaka,
  • Hyeon Hoe Kim,
  • Keewon Kim,
  • Chang Wook Jeong

Publication: European Urology 2019 May 15

PII: S0302-2838(19)30359-8

DOI: 10.1016/j.eururo.2019.04.042

Background:

Potency preservation often does not meet expectation despite nerve-sparing prostatectomy.

Objective:
To set the protocol for intraoperative cavernous nerve monitoring and mapping during robot-assisted radical prostatectomy (RARP), and to evaluate its safety and clinical feasibility.

Design, setting, and participants:
A prospective phase I/II, feasibility study was performed. A total of 30 patients with prostate cancer who underwent RARP at a high-volume tertiary academic hospital were enrolled.

Surgical procedure:
Pudendal somatosensory evoked potential, bulbocavernosus reflex, spontaneous corpus cavernosum electromyography (CC-EMG), median nerve stimulation evoked CC-EMG, and neurovascular bundle (NVB)-triggered CC-EMG with various stimulation protocols were assessed during conventional RARP under total intravenous anesthesia with controlled muscle relaxation.

Measurements:
The primary endpoint was the completion rate of planned surgery and assessment. Adverse events, and erectile and urinary functions were evaluated within 1 yr. CC-EMGs were graded and correlated with functional outcomes.

Results and limitations:
The completion rate was 100%. Only one patient experienced adverse events, which were not related to study intervention. Grades of CC-EMGs including NVB-triggered CC-EMG before prostate removal were associated with baseline five-item International Index of Erectile Function (IIEF-5) score (grades 0-1, 4.6±2.7; grade 2, 13.2±6.8; grades 3-4, 16.6±5.9; p=0.003). Furthermore, grades of CC-EMGs including NVB-triggered CC-EMG after prostate removal were significantly associated with potency recovery (grade 0, 12.5%; grade 1, 0%; grade 2, 33.3%; grades 3-4, 100% at 12 mo; p=0.005) and postoperative IIEF-5 scores at all evaluation time points (grades 0-1, 2.6±2.8; grade 2, 4.3±5.8; grades 3-4, 15.7±11.0 at 12 mo; p=0.003).

Conclusions:
We successfully established the protocol for safe intraoperative cavernous nerve monitoring and mapping using CC-EMG during RARP. Its grades were well correlated with erectile function.

Patient summary:
In this first-in-human feasibility study, we successfully established the protocol for safe intraoperative cavernous nerve monitoring and mapping method during robot-assisted radical prostatectomy. The results were significantly associated with erectile function. Evaluation of clinical efficacy to preserve potency seems worthy of further optimization and investigation in confirmatory clinical trials.