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You have accessJournal of UrologyBenign Prostatic Hyperplasia: Surgical Therapy prolonged use was examined through 1- and 5 yrs post-op. RESULTS: Perioperative medical therapy rates were similar between all treatment groups. 1yr: The rate of continued use following PUL, TURP and PVP was 2.5%, 4.0% and 4.2%, respectively. De novo use was low after all therapies yet lowest for PUL (0.5%) and similar between TURP (0.9%) and PVP (1.0%). The total 1yr medical therapy rate was lowest for PUL at 3.9% (TURP 6.1%; PVP 6.5%). 5yr: Medical therapy use increased following all procedures through 5 yrs. Rates of continued and de novo use were: PUL (8.4% cont.; 1.0% de novo), TURP (7.0% cont.; 2.0% de novo) and PVP (7.2% cont.; 1.7% de novo). The total 5yr medical therapy rate was similar between PUL (10.3%), TURP (10.2%) and PVP (10.2%). Alpha-blockers were the leading BPH drug class utilized through 1- and 5yrs post-PUL, TURP and PVP. CONCLUSIONS: Post-surgery medication use is a relatively unexplored factor of the BPH patient journey. Rates of medication use through 1yr were higher following TURP and PVP compared to PUL, and were equivalent at 5yrs. This may indicate that in a real-world setting, TURP and PVP patients could have more advanced disease that doesn't fully respond to that intervention. The 5yr rate of medication usage for PUL is similar to the rate demonstrated in the LIFT pivotal trial (10.3% vs 10.7% LIFT). Source of Funding: NeoTract/Teleflex Inc © 2024 by American Urological Association Education and Research, Inc.FiguresReferencesRelatedDetails Volume 211Issue 5SMay 2024Page: e1022 Advertisement Copyright & Permissions© 2024 by American Urological Association Education and Research, Inc.Metrics Author Information Steven Kaplan More articles by this author Dean Elterman More articles by this author Ronald Kaufman More articles by this author Claus Roehrborn More articles by this author Expand All Advertisement PDF downloadLoading ...
Kaplan et al. (Mon,) studied this question.
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