Abstract Objective: This study aimed to validate a new method for outpatient diode laser ablation of bladder tumors without sedation or pain control. Methods: Twenty-one patients with stage Ta low-grade… Click to show full abstract
Abstract Objective: This study aimed to validate a new method for outpatient diode laser ablation of bladder tumors without sedation or pain control. Methods: Twenty-one patients with stage Ta low-grade intermediate-risk bladder tumors underwent photodynamic-guided laser ablation of their bladder tumors and 1 month later follow-up cystoscopy with photodynamic and IMAGE1 S™-guided biopsies. Pain was measured using a visual analog scale (range 0–10). Symptoms and worries about the future disease course were calculated using the Quality of Life Questionnaire for Non-Muscle-Invasive Bladder Cancer (range 0–100, high scores indicating worse symptoms or worry). Costs of outpatient laser treatment versus inpatient conventional bladder tumor resection in the operating theatre were compared. Results: Patients had a median of three tumors (range 1–12). The median pain score was 1.0 (range 0–7) during laser ablation. Median quality of life scores were 24 (range 0–67) for symptoms and 42 (0–100) for worry. Two patients had minor hematuria and five had dysuria after laser therapy. Five patients (24%) had new Ta low-grade recurrence within 13 months that was biopsied and laser treated. No tumors progressed. Four patients had tumors identified using photodynamic diagnosis, and two had flat low-grade dysplasia identified using IMAGE1 S SPECTRA A and B and photodynamic diagnosis, none of which was seen using white-light cystoscopy. Outpatient laser treatment could save about €140,000 per million inhabitants versus inpatient bladder tumor surgery. Conclusion: Fluorescence-guided diode lasers provide efficient and almost pain-free treatment of low-grade urothelial cancer in conscious patients and could reduce healthcare costs.
               
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