Prostate cancer surgery
"New Technology- Robotic
Prostate Surgery minimizes blood loss and promotes early recovery in patients
undergoing radical prostatectomy for prostate cancer"
Technique of Athermal Robotic prostatectomy
Instructional videos
Mark, Julie and Prostate Cancer
Over the course of (10) two-minute, entertaining and
informative episodes, we walk beside Mark and Julie as
they battle prostate cancer. We are with them every step
along the way—the night before surgery, surgery,
post-operation, and recovery.
Episode I: Mark and Julie-They have cancer on
both sides of their family. Most families do. But, when
Mark finds himself getting up in the middle night it
starts a diagnosis that includes PSA (Prostate Specific
Antigens) tests and lab tests that are inconclusive.
Episode II: The Challenge Begins- Receiving the
biopsy report commences one of life's most challenging
journeys
Episode III: Fear Becomes Knowledge- Once we
understand the disease, we turn our concerns into
knowledge and a path forward that Mark believes must be
embraced.
Episode IV: Knowledge Becomes Choice - Open
procedures? Robotic surgery? Once we collect information
on prostate cancer and treatment options in the context
of our cancer stage and surgical profile, we commit to a
treatment path.
Episode V: The Doctor, the Robot and I- In an
era of robotic surgery options, then need for patients
to become an expert in a short time, and the security
and knowledge we gain from second opinions, a close
partnership becomes critical.
Episode VI: Complications on My Mind- Men focus
on different things, but two concerns stand out for both
patients and their doctors erectile dysfunction and
urinary incontinence.
Episode VII: Coming Around- Migration of cancer
tumors is always major concern. Until they operate the
extent of the cancer is not fully known. In this
episode, Mark returns from surgery and receives his
first report on the radical robotic prostatectomy
surgery.
Episode VIII: Recovery Path - Everyone's
recovery path is different tough there are a few
complications all prostate men facing prostate cancer
treatment face. They have their own struggles and
triumphs.
Episode IX: The Follow Up- Mark returns to gain
a thorough understanding of his recovery path and
outlook. In this episode, we walk alongside Mark and
July into the reception area and into the exam room.
Episode X: More than Medicine- Prostate cancer
is a condition and in this context, a story that does
not end. We learn in this episode about one of Mark's
colleagues and his transition from patient to patient
advocate.
Various videos with Dr. Tewari's comments-
http://www.brightcove.com/search.jsp?query=tewari
Surgical videos:
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10 min - Jan 19, 2007
... University Director, Program in
Urologic-Oncology Outcomes & Robotic
Prostatectomy 525 East 68th Street, Starr
900, New York, NY 10021 Citation: ...
http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=6638426887507342991
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urologiconcology - 10 min - Jan 18,
2007 -
... preservation of neurovascular structures -
The Athermal Robotic Technique of
Prostatectomy." Abstract #V1397. Abstract accepted
for presentation at the ...
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3c0SlMvlTGw
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4 min - Jan 19, 2007
... University Director, Program in
Urologic-Oncology Outcomes & Robotic
Prostatectomy 525 East 68th Street, Starr 900, New
York, NY 10021 Robotic ...
http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-5035842495322855951
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urologiconcology - 6 min - Jan 18,
2007
For more information contact Dr. Ash Tewari: ash@theehealth.com
or (212) 746-5638. www.theehealth.com
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PUKjyqjhzLs
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6 min - Jan 19, 2007 -
... Starr 900, New York, NY 10021 Robotic
Prostatectomy Prostate Cancer
Surgery Tewari Weill Cornell Urology
Urologic Oncology ART Athermal ...
http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=8784970815220121571
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urologiconcology - 8 min -
Jan 18, 2007
For more information contact Dr. Ash Tewari:
ash@theehealth.com or (212) 746-5638.
www.theehealth.com
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5mOdUHlw9-g
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urologiconcology - 6 min -
Jan 18, 2007 -
For more information contact Dr. Ash Tewari:
ash@theehealth.com or (212) 746-5638.
www.theehealth.com
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2PQAg2PsRxM
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urologiconcology - 6 min - Jan 18,
2007
For more information contact Dr. Ash Tewari: ash@theehealth.com
or (212) 746-5638. www.theehealth.com
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0EoBgG8Y67w
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urologiconcology - 3 min - Jan 22,
2007
For more information contact Dr. Ash Tewari: ash@theehealth.com
or (212) 746-5638. www.theehealth.com
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YaUvapY55vo
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Recent papers
Comparison of various surgical treatments
Call 212 746 5643 for more information
ART Prostatectomy Symposium: Check-
www.cornellurology.com/roboticsymposium
Latest paper on Athermal Robotic Technique of Nerve Sparing (ART)-
this article describes scientific foundations for
Trizonal Nerve
Sparing using Athermal approach......Read pdf file.
This is an
electronic version of an article published in BJU International:
complete citation information for the final version of the paper, as
published in the print edition of BJU International, is available on the
Blackwell Synergy online delivery service, accessible via the journal’s
website at
www.blackwellpublishing.com/bju or
www.blackwell-synergy.com.
Call 212 746 5643 for more information
Recent NEWS Week article-
excerpts from..
NEWS WEEK Article
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Cutting Edge
Medical progress is measured in many ways. As robotic surgery
comes of age..... A look ahead.
Photo illustration by Newsweek; photograph by Adam Friedberg for
Newsweek (stereo viewer); courtesy of Intuitive Surgical Inc.
(3-D image)
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By Jennifer Barrett
Newsweek
Updated: 2:57 p.m. ET Dec. 4, 2005
Dec. 12, 2005 issue - Stuart Forbes
celebrated his 60th birthday on April 11. A week later, he was
diagnosed with prostate cancer. "It was quite a month," says Forbes, a
blunt Vietnam veteran who runs a consulting firm outside Boston. When
biopsies confirmed he had an aggressive form of the disease, Forbes
started looking for a surgeon. The first recommended a traditional
radical prostatectomy, which would require an eight- to 10-inch
incision and at least two days in the hospital. Forbes was also warned
that he would likely lose almost all the nerves on the left side of
the prostate, which could permanently affect his sexual function. "I
thought, 'I need to really look at all my options'," says Forbes. He
considered high-intensity focused ultrasound ablation, a relatively
new technology that's been used in Europe. But it's expensive and
would require transatlantic trips. He looked into various forms of
radiation, as well as proton-beam therapy. Then, in June, his
girlfriend took him to a symposium on robotic surgery. "I saw the
machine and how it worked," remembers Forbes. "It was just incredible.
I said, 'That's it'."
In August, Dr. Ashutosh Tewari,
director of robotic prostatectomy at NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital/Weill
Cornell, removed Forbes's walnut-size prostate and lymph nodes and
reattached his bladder to his urethra without once putting his hands
inside the patient. Using Intuitive Surgical's da Vinci robotic system
and operating through five tiny incisions, Tewari conducted the entire
procedure from across the room. He sat at a console and turned two
knobs to remotely manipulate tiny surgical instruments attached to
adjustable robotic arms. Forbes was walking within hours of his
surgery and was discharged the next day. He compares the discomfort
from the largest incision (about two inches long, and the only one to
require stitches) to a bad pimple. By midweek he was walking three
miles daily. In 10 days he was back at work. After three weeks he was
playing golf again; by late October he'd regained normal urinary, and
most sexual, function. "I'm about as excited as anyone can be about
this procedure," he says.
Using robots to perform surgery once seemed a
futuristic fantasy. Not anymore. An estimated 36,600 robotic
procedures will be performed this year—from heart-bypass surgeries to
kidney transplants to hysterectomies. That's up nearly 50 percent from
last year, and analysts predict the figure will nearly double in 2006
to more than 70,000 procedures. Since the da Vinci was approved by the
Food and Drug Administration in July 2000 (the only robotic system to
get the FDA nod), about 350 of the units have been purchased,
including 30 in the last quarter alone, at about $1.3 million apiece.
Surgeons who use the system have found that patients have less blood
loss and pain, lower risk of complications, shorter hospital stays and
quicker recovery times than those who have open surgery—and even, in
many cases, laparoscopic procedures.
To get additional information,
please call 212 746 5643
Remaining story at-
NEWS WEEK Article
Dr. Tewari leads the robotic prostatectomy
program and has been intimately involved with over thousand of robotic
prostatectomies. His technique of nerve sparing has one several
awards including first prize by American Urologic Association.
He has been invited to perform surgeries at at international
institutions such as Cambridge, UK, Guy's hospital, UK and University
of Innsbruck, Austria. He has published hundreds of publications
about Robotic Prostatectomy and prostate cancer. His book on robotic
surgery is in press and another book on prostate cancer is being
prepared.
He was trained by worlds premier surgeon on
Robotic Prostatectomy- Professor Mani Menon at Henry Ford Hospital.
With Professor Menon, who is considered father of robotic surgery, he co-authored several key techniques and
publications about robotic prostatectomy.
Call 212 746 5643 for more details
More reading:
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Comparison of various surgical treatments
Pooled Analysis of
Published data
Nerve Sparing Technique
General overview
Advance Robotic techniques of Prostatectomy (ART)
Robotic prostatectomy has become an important modality in management of
prostate cancer. We have been involved in refining and developing advance
techniques for meeting key goals for prostate cancer surgery. Dr. Tewari
organized a symposium in New York last year which described these techniques.
More about technique....
Robotic Prostatectomy Program at Cornell Institute of robotic surgery
The goal of
Robotic Prostatectomy is to completely remove prostate cancer while
minimizing the side effects of conventional surgery. Robotic
Prostatectomy has been proven safe and effective for men with prostate
cancer. The
information provided here is based on the published work in which Dr.
Tewari was a co-author with his mentor, Professor Mani Menon, Director, Vattikuti Institute of Urology.
Dr. Menon has pioneered the field of robotic urology.
Cornell
Robotic Prostatectomy Program offers
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Latest robotic
technology with the da Vinci® Surgical System
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Trained team of
surgeon, fellows, nurses and robotic coordinators performing 7-10
cases/week
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Lead surgeon (Dr. Tewari) is American
Board of Urology certified surgeon who has been involved with over
1300 robotic procedures including those in his training. Since
his move to Cornell he has performed approximately 400 robotic
surgeries in last two years.
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Pioneer work in robotic nerve sparing
procedures- ART Prostatectomy.
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Individualized Program for Oncologic
optimization- Protocol and technique to minimize positive margin
rates.
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Integrated continence recovery program
involving modern techniques and state of art equipments.
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Integrated early
sexual recovery program
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Preoperative image guided treatment
planning to optimize surgical technique for an individual patient to
adjust for his unique internal anatomy
- Basic and
clinical research on robotics by Dr. Tewari
- Leading
hospital with trained staff- New York Presbyterian Hospital is
amongst top 10 hospitals according to US News rating
The New
Frontier
Surgical removal of the
prostate and surrounding tissue
(radical prostatectomy) has long been recognized as one of the most
effective forms of therapy for prostate cancer. A conventional radical
prostatectomy involves an open incision across the abdomen. The
Cornell Institute of Robotic Surgery in the Department of Urology at
NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital has entered the next generation of
prostate surgery by performing robotic laparoscopic prostatectomy
using the daVinci™ computer-enhanced minimally invasive surgery
system.
Team
The Robotic
Prostatectomy Program at Cornell is directed by Ash Tewari, MD. The
Robotic Prostatectomy Program team includes laparoscopic fellowship
trained surgeons, dedicated operating room team, a robotic coordinator, a nurse practitioner, two physician
assistants, several research coordinators and data base administrators.
Technology
This procedure
uses computer enhanced
minimally invasive daVinci™ surgical system. The system is empowered
with I-Max like three-dimensional vision. The surgeon controls robotic
arms that hold special surgical instruments and are inserted into the
abdomen through small openings. A camera (a long, thin, lighted
telescope) is inserted and connected to the computer monitor that
allows the surgeon to see inside the body. The vision is stereoscopic
and magnified ten to fifteen
fold.

The Stereoscopic 3-D magnification helps the surgeon to identify the
delicate nerves and muscles surrounding the prostate. The depth
perception provides precision during the surgery and allows meticulous
surgical dissection. Every structure
can be identified and precisely separated from the prostate. The
camera can be negotiated in very narrow corners of the body, which can
be hard to visualize when looking with the naked eye. The augmented
image perspectives help the surgeon in minimizing damage to erectile nerves.
The robotic arms
can rotate a full 360 degrees in various planes, allowing the surgeon
to manipulate instruments with greater precision and flexibility.
These instruments are mounted at the tip and thus could be controlled
with high fidelity and dexterity. This ability to move small
instruments in any possible direction helps tremendously in performing
delicate surgical moves which involve the ability to rotate, turn,
flex, extend, push, twist, abduct and adduct while performing a
complex surgical task.
Procedure
The prostate,
pelvic lymph nodes, seminal vesicles and adjacent tissue are removed
through the small incisions, which are closed with a few stitches.
Just like conventional open surgery in aggressive cancers, robotic
prostatectomy includes removal of lymph nodes that drain the prostate.
Indications for removal of lymph nodes depend upon the cancer grade,
the PSA level and the digital rectal examination. In addition to
removing the prostate, seminal vesicles also are removed. Men can no
longer father children following the procedure. However, NYP hospital
is a premier center for infertility and assistance is available for
patients who wish to.
Patients usually are discharged within 24 hours and return to normal
activity in approximately two weeks. Most patients start walking on
the same day of surgery and are able to drive soon thereafter.
After the operation, patients have a catheter to drain the bladder
(Foley). When the prostate is removed, the bladder has to be connected
to the urinary channel within the penis (urethra). The catheter
helps protect the connection during the healing process. In most
patients, the catheter is removed in 7 days. There is a very small
chance that it has to be reinserted because of temporary swelling at
the connection site. Robotic Prostatectomy leads to a rapid
recuperation in most patients.
Patients begin walking the evening of surgery and begin a liquid diet
one day after surgery.
Who is the
candidate for this surgery?
Patients with
clinically localized prostate cancer who are medically fit to undergo
surgery are candidates for this procedure.
Potential
benefits of Robotic Surgery
·
Cosmetics-
small key holes
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Less pain-
four fold reduction in pain than open surgery
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Minimal blood loss-
one tenth of open procedure
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Lowering the need for
blood transfusion and associated complications.
Rarely do patients require blood transfusions while they are under
going robotic surgery. However during open surgery, approximately 67%
patients require blood transfusions.
·
Greater post
operative hemoglobin- The
patients go home with 30% more hemoglobin, which reduces the fatigue
and patients feel much more energetic and less tired.
·
Minimal disruption in
their life style, as
patients stays in hospital 1/3rd the time than conventional
procedure.
·
Shorter duration of
catheterization- there is
50% reduction the duration of catheterization following robotic
prostatectomy. However, few open surgeons also specialize in removing
the catheter early. Shorter catheterization usually translates in
less discomfort and early return to life style.
·
Proven safety in
trained hands-There is four
fold reduction in complication rate in trained hands. Early robotic
series usually reports higher complication rates. Most complications
are minor and require minimal care.
References
1. Menon, M., Shrivastava, A., Tewari, A. et
al.: Laparoscopic and robot assisted radical prostatectomy:
establishment of a structured program and preliminary analysis of
outcomes. J Urol, 168: 945, 2002
2. Tewari, A., Srivasatava, A., Menon, M.: A
prospective comparison of radical retropubic and robot-assisted
prostatectomy: experience in one institution. BJU Int, 92: 205,
2003
3. Jourdan, I. C., Dutson, E., Garcia, A. et
al.: Stereoscopic vision provides a significant advantage for
precision robotic laparoscopy. Br J Surg, 91: 879, 2004
4. Sarle, R., Tewari, A., Shrivastava, A. et
al.: Surgical robotics and laparoscopic training drills. J Endourol,
18: 63, 2004
5. Tewari, A., Menon, M.: Vattikuti Institute
prostatectomy: surgical technique and current results. Curr Urol Rep,
4: 119, 2003
6. Tewari, A., Peabody, J. O., Fischer, M. et
al.: An operative and anatomic study to help in nerve sparing during
laparoscopic and robotic radical prostatectomy. Eur Urol, 43:
444, 2003
7. Tewari, A., Peabody, J., Sarle, R. et al.:
Technique of da vinci robot-assisted anatomic radical prostatectomy.
Urology, 60: 569, 2002
8. Menon, M., Tewari, A., Peabody, J.:
Vattikuti Institute prostatectomy: technique. J Urol, 169:
2289, 2003
Contact
To
receive additional information or schedule an appointment, please
email
Robotic
Coordinator or call 212 746 5643 or fax your information at
212 746 8396.Or
Call 212 746 5638 or email at
Robotic
Coordinator