DutchNews, July 15,
2016
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| Surgery using robots. Photo: Flip Franssen/Hollandse Hoogte |
Nine large Dutch hospital groups have come up with a
plan to concentrate robot surgery for prostate cancer in two major centres,
arguing that the more experienced surgeons are, the better the results.
At the
moment 37 different Dutch hospitals carry out the surgery, a total of 2,500
times a year. But some carry out just a handful of operations and research
shows patients at those hospitals have a 40% greater chance of serious
complications.
By contrast at the Martini Clinic in Hamburg, which specialises
in the technique, just 6.5% of patients develop problems with incontinence,
compared with 43% across Germany as a whole.
The hospitals say the surgery
should be concentrated at the Maasstad hospital and Rotterdam and Canisius
Wilhelmina hospital in Nijmegen. They would each carry out at least 500
operations a year, sharply reducing the risk of incontinence and impotence to
patients.
Amsterdam’s specialist cancer hospital Antoni van Leeuwenhoek has
welcomed the initiative to concentrate robotic prostate surgery in centres of
excellence. However, it told broadcaster NOS that a centre should also be based
in the Amsterdam region.
Some 10,000 men are identified with prostate cancer in
the Netherlands every year and around 2,500 die from the disease. Earlier this
year, European research led by Erasmus University in Rotterdam showed a
two-yearly prostate cancer test for men aged 55 to 59 would save 300 lives a
year.

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