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Prostatic urethral lift (Urolift) has been developed as a minimally invasive alternative to transurethral resection of the prostate with no need of general anaesthesia, less need of urinary catheter and less exposure to post-operative complication. Its efficacy and safety have been assessed by 2 clinical randomized trials with evidence of urinary symptom improvement remaining inferior to TURP but durable for 5 years. Urolift preserved overall quality of life better than TURP. Urolift has been recommended by the European Association of Urology guidelines and recognized by French authorities but cannot be financed by the hospital itself. Reimbursement of the implants by healthcare system is therefore needed for the distribution of Urolift in France.
The additional cost of the implants could be compensated by a reduced length of hospital stay and a lower rate of post-operative complications inducing healthcare expenditures. This study aims to assess if Urolift could be a cost-effective therapeutic strategy compared to transurethral surgery with 2 phases design: a field study comparing patients treated with Urolift to those treated with TURP/laser during 1 year follow-up, and an additional study comparing healthcare consumptions during 3 years follow-up between each group using data of the French National Claims Database (SNDS database).
Full description
Transurethral surgery such as transurethral resection of the prostate (TURP), laser enucleation or laser vaporisation, is the first line surgical treatment for bladder outlet obstruction secondary to benign prostatic hyperplasia. Even if bipolar and laser surgery have improved surgical outcomes in terms of length of hospital stay and post-operative complications, these procedures remain associated with a significant amount of infectious and bleeding complications, as well as with some persistent side effects such as sexual dysfunction and urinary incontinence.
Prostatic urethral lift (Urolift) has been developed as a minimally invasive alternative to TURP with no need of general anaesthesia, less need of urinary catheter and less exposure to post-operative complication. Its efficacy and safety have been assessed by 2 clinical randomized trials with evidence of urinary symptom improvement remaining inferior to TURP but durable for 5 years. Urolift preserved overall quality of life better than TURP. Urolift has been recommended by the European Association of Urology guidelines and recognized by French authorities but cannot be financed by the hospital itself. Reimbursement of the implants by healthcare system is therefore needed for the distribution of Urolift in France.
The additional cost of the implants could be compensated by a reduced length of hospital stay and a lower rate of post-operative complications inducing healthcare expenditures. This study aims to assess if Urolift could be a cost-effective therapeutic strategy compared to transurethral surgery with 2 phases design: a field study comparing patients treated with Urolift to those treated with TURP/laser during 1 year follow-up, and an additional study comparing healthcare consumptions during 3 years follow-up between each group using data of the French National Claims Database (SNDS database).
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Inclusion and exclusion criteria
● The PUL and TURP/LASER cohorts:
Inclusion criteria:
Exclusion criteria:
Patient with current urinary retention, post void residual urine > 250ml,
Patient with active urinary tract infection at time of treatment,
Patient with previous Benign Prostatic Hyperplasia procedure,
Patient with urethral conditions that may prevent insertion and delivery of device system into bladder,
Patient with previous pelvic surgery or irradiation,
Patient with history of neurogenic or atonic bladder,
Patient with biopsy of the prostate within the past 6 weeks,
Patient with life expectancy estimated to be less than 1 year,
Patient with history of prostate or bladder cancer,
Patient with PSA>10ng/ml unless prostate biopsy is negative,
Patient under guardianship or curatorship,
Patient intending to move abroad within 1 year after inclusion will not be included either,
Patient participating to another interventional study on benign prostatic hyperplasia during the study.
Inclusion criteria:
Exclusion criteria:
1,360 participants in 3 patient groups
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Central trial contact
Meric BENBOUJEMA; Grégoire Robert
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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