Journal article

Symptom relief and anejaculation after aquablation or transurethral resection of the prostate: subgroup analysis from a blinded randomized trial

M Plante, P Gilling, N Barber, M Bidair, P Anderson, M Sutton, T Aho, E Kramolowsky, A Thomas, B Cowan, RP Kaufman, A Trainer, A Arther, G Badlani, M Desai, L Doumanian, AE Te, M DeGuenther, C Roehrborn

BJU International | Published : 2019

Abstract

Objective: To test the hypothesis that benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH) robotic surgery with aquablation would have a more pronounced benefit in certain patient subgroups, such as men with more challenging anatomies (e.g. large prostates, large middle lobes) and men with moderate BPH. Methods: We conducted prespecified and post hoc exploratory subgroup analyses from a double-blind, multicentre prospective randomized controlled trial that compared transurethral resection of the prostate (TURP) using either standard electrocautery vs surgery using robotic waterjet (aquablation) to determine whether certain baseline factors predicted more marked responses after aquablation as compared with TU..

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University of Melbourne Researchers