Effectiveness of epidural versus alternate analgesia for pain relief after radical prostatectomy and correlation with biochemical recurrence in men with prostate cancer.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES:
Our
objectives were to analyze the effectiveness of epidural anesthesia in
patients who underwent open retropubic radical prostatectomy (RRP) at
our institution over the past decade, and to examine subsequent
oncologic outcomes, comparing those receiving with those not receiving
epidural anesthesia.
METHODS:
A comprehensive database of
all patients undergoing RRP from November 1996 to December 2006 was
analyzed; 354 patients underwent RRP at our institution and were divided
into those receiving or not receiving an epidural. An independent pain management
team scoring technical success found epidural technique to be
consistent. Oncological outcome was an endpoint of our study, comparing
both analysis groups. We classed prostate-specific
antigen (PSA) recurrence after RRP as a serum PSA ≥ 0.2 ng/mL at any
stage of postoperative follow-up. Complications were recorded to 30 days
using the modified Clavien system, and full statistical analyses were
undertaken.
RESULTS:
Records were available for 239 men; we observed a decreased trend in the use of epidural for pain management,
along with a decrease in average hospital stay and an overall epidural
success rate of 64%. When dividing data into RRP with and without
epidural, we found a median hospital stay of 7 days for patients
receiving an epidural compared with 6 days for those not receiving an
epidural. The differences were statistically significant (P < 0.048)
and remained so after adjusting for complications (P < 0.0001).
Regarding oncological outcome, PSA recurrence was further analyzed in
this cohort. Percentage of recurrence was higher (14.8%) for patients
receiving an epidural than for the non-epidural group (4.8%). The
differences were statistically significant (P = 0.012).
CONCLUSION:
Epidural
analgesia increased length of hospital stay and technical problems
related to the epidural. Furthermore, men receiving an epidural showed
an increased recurrence of PSA. In light of our findings, epidurals are
probably not indicated for men undergoing RRP. However, as minimally
invasive techniques are becoming more widespread, and epidural analgesia
is being used less frequently, large randomized controlled trials to
definitively support our hypotheses are unlikely to be undertaken.
KEYWORDS:
analgesia, epidural, prostate neoplasm, prostatectomy, surgery
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