Surgeon experience is strongly associated with biochemical recurrence after radical prostatectomy for all preoperative risk categories Journal Article


Authors: Klein, E. A.; Bianco, F. J.; Serio, A. M.; Eastham, J. A.; Kattan, M. W.; Pontes, J. E.; Vickers, A. J.; Scardino, P. T.
Article Title: Surgeon experience is strongly associated with biochemical recurrence after radical prostatectomy for all preoperative risk categories
Abstract: Purpose: We have previously reported that there is a learning curve for open radical prostatectomy. In the current study we determined whether the effects of the learning curve are modified by patient risk, as defined by preoperative tumor characteristics. Materials and Methods: The study included 7,683 eligible patients with prostate cancer treated with open radical prostatectomy by 1 of 72 surgeons. Surgeon experience was coded as the total prior number of radical prostatectomies done by the surgeon before a patient surgery. Multivariate survival time regression models were used to evaluate the association between surgeon experience and biochemical recurrence separately in each preoperative risk group. Results: We saw no evidence that patient risk affected the learning curve. There was a statistically significant association between biochemical recurrence and surgeon experience on all analyses. The absolute risk difference in a patient receiving treatment from a surgeon with 10 vs 250 prior radical prostatectomies was 6.6% (95% CI 3.4-10.3), 12.0% (95% CI 6.9-18.2) and 9.7% (95% CI 1.2-18.2) in patients at low, medium and high preoperative risk. Recurrence-free probability in patients with low risk disease approached 100% for the most experienced surgeons. Conclusions: Cancer control after radical prostatectomy improves with increasing surgeon experience irrespective of patient risk. Excellent rates of cancer control in patients with low risk disease treated by the most experienced surgeons suggest that the primary reason that recurrence develops in such patients is inadequate surgical technique. The results have significant implications for clinical care. © 2008 American Urological Association.
Keywords: adult; controlled study; aged; middle aged; major clinical study; cancer recurrence; cancer risk; preoperative care; outcome assessment; neoplasm recurrence, local; risk factors; outcome assessment (health care); prostate cancer; prostatic neoplasms; prostate; preoperative period; clinical competence; prostatectomy; surgeon; surgery; practice (psychology)
Journal Title: Journal of Urology
Volume: 179
Issue: 6
ISSN: 0022-5347
Publisher: Elsevier Science, Inc.  
Date Published: 2008-06-01
Start Page: 2212
End Page: 2217
Language: English
DOI: 10.1016/j.juro.2008.01.107
PUBMED: 18423716
PROVIDER: scopus
PMCID: PMC3567913
DOI/URL:
Notes: --- - "Cited By (since 1996): 54" - "Export Date: 17 November 2011" - "CODEN: JOURA" - "Source: Scopus"
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MSK Authors
  1. Peter T Scardino
    671 Scardino
  2. Andrew J Vickers
    882 Vickers
  3. Angel M Cronin
    145 Cronin
  4. James Eastham
    538 Eastham
  5. Fernando J Bianco
    72 Bianco