Results of a 5-year multicenter trial of a new generation cooled high energy transurethral microwave thermal therapy catheter for benign prostatic hyperplasia - Abstract

Department of Urology, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minnesota, USA.

 

We determined the safety, effectiveness and 5-year durability of the new generation, cooled, high energy microwave treatment Cooled ThermoCath® catheter with the Targis® cooled high energy transurethral microwave thermal therapy system by performing a prospective, multicenter trial in men with lower urinary tract symptoms and clinical benign prostatic hyperplasia.

At 5 American centers a total of 66 men were treated with the catheter at a 28.5-minute session. Patients were taught self-catheterization after treatment. They returned after 1 and 6 weeks, 3 and 6 months, and annually for 5 years to assess the American Urological Association symptom score, uroflowmetry, quality of life, Symptom Problem Index, Benign Prostatic Hyperplasia Impact Index, treatment satisfaction, adverse events and need for re-treatment.

Average treatment duration was 29 minutes. Of the 66 men 33 (50%) required no posttreatment catheterization of any kind, 25 (38%) used intermittent self-catheterization and 8 (12%) required indwelling catheterization with or without self-catheterization. No acute retention events were reported after the initial catheterization through 5 years. No serious adverse events were associated with treatment. Traditional efficacy measures showed highly significant improvement from 6 weeks and thereafter (p < 0.001). A total of 19 men (29%) underwent additional medical or surgical benign prostatic hyperplasia related treatment at some time during the 5-year followup. Six men (9%) underwent surgical benign prostatic hyperplasia related treatment. At 5 years 40 of 51 men (78%) reported satisfaction with benign prostatic hyperplasia treatment.

Cooled, high energy transurethral microwave thermal therapy using a new generation treatment catheter produced safe, durable, clinically relevant results in men with lower urinary tract symptoms caused by benign prostatic hyperplasia for 5 years after treatment with acceptable medical and surgical re-treatment rates.

Written by:
Mynderse LA, Roehrborn CG, Partin AW, Preminger GM, Coté EP.   Are you the author?

Reference: J Urol. 2011 May;185(5):1804-10.
doi: 10.1016/j.juro.2010.12.054

PubMed Abstract
PMID: 21420115

UroToday.com BPH and Male LUTS Section