Same day discharge for robot‐assisted radical prostatectomy: a prospective cohort study documenting an Australian approach

Author:

Mulholland Clancy1ORCID,Soliman Christopher1,Furrer Marc A.123,Sathianathen Niranjan1ORCID,Corcoran Niall M.14,Schramm Belinda5,Mertens Evie1,Peters Justin134,Costello Anthony134ORCID,Lawrentschuk Nathan14,Dundee Philip134,Thomas Benjamin134

Affiliation:

1. Department of Urology The Royal Melbourne Hospital Parkville Victoria Australia

2. Department of Urology, Inselspital, Bern University Hospital University of Bern Bern Switzerland

3. Department of Surgery, Royal Melbourne Hospital, University of Melbourne The Australian Medical Robotics Academy Melbourne Victoria Australia

4. Department of Surgery University of Melbourne Parkville Victoria Australia

5. Department of Anaesthesia Royal Melbourne Hospital Parkville Victoria Australia

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundThe introduction of robotic surgical systems has significantly impacted urological surgery, arguably more so than other surgical disciplines. The focus of our study was length of hospital stay ‐ patients have traditionally been discharged day 1 post‐robot‐assisted radical prostatectomy (RARP), however, during the ongoing COVID‐19 pandemic and consequential resource limitations, our centre has facilitated a cohort of same‐day discharges with initial success.MethodsWe conducted a prospective tertiary single‐centre cohort study of a series of all patients (n = 28) – undergoing RARP between January and April 2021. All patients were considered for a day zero discharge pathway which consisted of strict inclusion criteria. At follow‐up, each patient's perspective on their experience was assessed using a validated post‐operative satisfaction questionnaire. Data were reviewed retrospectively for all those undergoing RARP over the study period, with day zero patients compared to overnight patients.ResultsOverall, 28 patients 20 (71%) fulfilled the objective criteria for day zero discharge. Eleven patients (55%) agreed pre‐operatively to day zero discharge and all were successfully discharged on the same day as their procedure. There was no statistically significant difference in age, BMI, ASA, Charlson score or disease volume. All patients indicated a high level of satisfaction with their procedure. Median time from completion of surgery to discharge was 426 min (7.1 h) in the day zero discharge cohort.ConclusionDay zero discharge for RARP appears to deliver high satisfaction, oncological and safety outcomes. Therefore, our study demonstrates early success with unsupported same‐day discharge in carefully selected and pre‐counselled patients.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Medicine,Surgery

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