[First cohort: Robotic radical prostatectomy at the Mexican Institute for Social Security].

Prostate cancer is the most common cancer in men and the leading cause of malignancy-related mortality in Mexico. The Mexican Institute for Social Security (IMSS for its initialism in Spanish) introduced its first robotic system at the Oncology Hospital of the 21st Century National Medical Center in Mexico City.

To evaluate the accumulated experience, perioperative, oncologic and functional outcomes of the first 200 robot-assisted radical prostatectomy (RARP) cases.

A retrospective analysis of 200 patients undergoing RARP for localized prostate cancer was conducted. Perioperative and postoperative variables, pathology results, complications, and one-year continence rates were considered.

Mean surgical time was 242.1 minutes (90-600), with a console time of 197.6 minutes (68-495). Mean blood loss was 327.7 cc (10-1800). Positive surgical margins were observed in 34.5% of cases. Complications occurred in 22 patients (11%). No conversions to open surgery or mortality were reported. Mean hospital stay was 2.54 days (2-14). Postoperative antigen was undetectable in 88.5% of patients. The continence rate was 95.7%.

The first 200 RARP cases at our institution demonstrate the accumulated experience with the procedure, showing low complication rates. These results are consistent with those of high-volume centers, which require additional long-term functional follow-up.
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Authors

Fuziwara-Ruíz Fuziwara-Ruíz, Hernández-Toriz Hernández-Toriz, Huerta-Gómez Huerta-Gómez, Quintero-Becerra Quintero-Becerra, Martínez-Cornelio Martínez-Cornelio, Zapot-Martínez Zapot-Martínez, Delgado-Herrera Delgado-Herrera, Castro-Chávez Castro-Chávez, Pérez-Ramírez Pérez-Ramírez
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