Water vapor thermal therapy to alleviate catheter-dependent urinary retention secondary to benign prostatic hyperplasia. Journal Article


Authors: McVary, KT; Holland, B; Beahrs, JR
Article Title: Water vapor thermal therapy to alleviate catheter-dependent urinary retention secondary to benign prostatic hyperplasia.
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Water vapor thermal therapy utilizes convectively delivered thermal energy to target ablation of obstructive prostatic tissue. We report results of this thermal therapy for relief of nonneurogenic complete urinary retention associated with BPH. PATIENTS AND METHODS: We conducted a retrospective analysis of 38 catheter-dependent men with complete urinary retention consecutively enrolled in a registry in two centers: median age 75.5 years and multiple comorbidities, median prostate volume 58.5?cc (23-153), median 2 failed trials without catheter (TWOCs), and median catheter dependency 3 months (0.3-35). The RezumTM System thermal therapy procedure was performed in an ambulatory surgery center with conscious sedation or an office procedure room with a modified periprostatic block. Water vapor injections were customized to the configuration of the hyperplastic gland, including median lobe and/or enlarged central zone. RESULTS: Of the 38 treated patients, one was lost to follow-up and 26 of 37 (70.3%) voided spontaneously (mean of 1.6?±?0.8 TWOCs) and were catheter free a median of 26 days (range 4-65) after the procedure; 18 of these 26 (69%) patients discontinued BPH medications. No significant differences in age, prostate volume, number of water vapor injections, or presence of the median lobe were associated with predicting a successful treatment outcome. Duration of follow-up for 20 catheter-free patients was a median of 475 days or 15.8 months (140-804 days); six patients were followed a median of 31.5 days (0-60). Adverse events were infrequent, mild, and resolved quickly including dysuria in five patients (13%), gross hematuria in four (10.5%), and UTIs in two (2.6%) with indwelling catheters. CONCLUSIONS: Water vapor thermal therapy may provide an effective and safe alternative to surgical treatment in this group of catheter-dependent patients in complete urinary retention.
Journal Title: PROSTATE CANCER AND PROSTATIC DISEASES
Publisher: Unknown  
Date Published: 2019