June
Issue
19 74
IR community backs PAE and calls for close collaboration with urologists Current evidence supports the use of prostate artery embolization (PAE) as a safe, effective, and minimally-invasive treatment for the symptoms of benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH) in appropriately selected patients. This is the conclusion of a multisociety consensus position statement on the use of PAE in the treatment of lower urinary tract symptoms attributed to BPH. The document has been published in the May edition of the Journal of Vascular and Interventional Radiology (JVIR) and outlines recommended standards of practice. The multisociety and multidisciplinary position statement comes from the Society of Interventional Radiology (SIR), the Cardiovascular and Interventional Radiological Society of Europe (CIRSE), Société Française de Radiologie (SFR), and the British Society of Interventional Radiology (BSIR).
Vincent Vidal: Emborrhoids
Page 12
Alex Tang:
Profile
Page 28
“The era of healthcare disruption is here”: IR unity urged in Dotter lecture
Interventional radiologists must work as a group to make the practice of medicine more patient-centric and efficient, said Alan H Matsumoto, professor and chair of the department of radiology and medical imaging at the University of Virginia, Charlottesville, USA, who delivered the Society of Interventional Radiology’s (SIR) 2019 Dr Charles T Dotter Lecture during SIR’s annual scientific meeting (23–28 March, Austin, USA).
Marc Sapoval presents at GEST 2019 during the PAE Symposium
H
owever, the interventional radiology (IR) community is still working to convince their urology colleagues to adopt the procedure as one treatment option. An SIR-sponsored research consensus panel for PAE has convened with urologists from the American Urological Association (AUA) to map a path towards PAE gaining acceptance in the urologists’ own guidelines. This meeting was chaired by Clifford Davis (Medical College of Virginia, Richmond, USA) and Jafar Golzarian (University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, USA). Golzarian informed Interventional News that one of the key takeaways from this meeting was understanding the importance urologists place on sham studies. Currently, a study comparing PAE with a sham procedure is underway; many in the IR community are hopeful that the publication of this data will support their case for the recognition of PAE as an effective, minimally-invasive procedure by urologists.
The recommendations of the multisociety consensus position statement
The multisociety release, penned by Justin McWilliams (David Geffen School of Medicine, Los Angeles, USA)
et al, advises PAE be used as a “valuable minimally invasive option for patients who cannot tolerate or who have failed medical therapy, and those who are poor surgical candidates or refuse invasive surgery.” The document makes the following eight recommendations: PAE is an acceptable minimally invasive treatment option for appropriately selected men with BPH and moderate to severe lower urinary tract symptoms. PAE can be considered as a treatment option in patients with BPH and moderate to severe lower urinary tract symptoms who have very large prostate glands (>80cm3), without an upper limit of prostate size. PAE can be considered as a treatment option in patients with BPH and acute or chronic urinary retention in the setting of preserved bladder function as a method of achieving catheter independence. PAE can be considered as a treatment option in patients with BPH and moderate to severe lower urinary tract symptoms who wish to preserve erectile and/or ejaculatory function. PAE can be considered in patients with haematuria of prostatic origin as a method of achieving cessation of bleeding. Continued on page 2
“BY PROVIDING TIMELY and accurate diagnoses and performing minimally invasive procedures with less morbidity and faster recovery times for patients, interventional radiologists are well positioned to address the triple aim of healthcare: better patient care, improving the health of populations and reducing per capita costs,” said Matsumoto. “We must have the will and fortitude to employ patience while we adapt and create mutually viable practice models for all members of our specialty. Interventional radiology can go so much further together, as one, in our efforts to grow the specialty and serve patients,” he said. “We must grow the relationship with patients to transition from being a doctor’s doctor to a patient’s doctor. Our patients can become some of our biggest advocates and allies, as long as we put them at the centre of our care models.” Matsumoto centred his lecture on four facts that he believes are impacting the practice of medicine and IR in the USA. In his words, these are: US healthcare is the most expensive in the world, yet ranks last amongst developed countries. Consumerism is starting to drive healthcare. Information is doubling every 73 days. Healthcare is changing so quickly, that being adaptable is now a requisite for health systems and providers. Elaborating on the expense and inefficiencies of the US healthcare system in his Dotter lecture, SIR Continued on page 6