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The Surgeon Experience Factor

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IPCSG_Surgeon_Experience_Learning_Curve.html | Claude IPCSG Newsletter  ·  Surgeon Experience & Learning Curve  ·  March 2026 How many cases does it take before a robotic prostatectomy surgeon reaches proficiency? The evidence reveals not one learning curve but several — and one of them may never fully plateau. What patients need to know before choosing a surgeon. March 2026 Bottom Line Up Front (BLUF) Surgical experience is one of the strongest independent predictors of outcomes after radical prostatectomy — in some studies as powerful as the choice of surgical technique itself. The research reveals not a single learning curve but a cascade of overlapping ones, each stabilizing at a different case threshold: operative efficiency and complication avoidance improve within the first 50–100 cases; positive surgical margin rates stabilize around 150–200 cases; urinary continence continues improving past 200–400 cases; and erec...

What the Surgery Is Actually Doing

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RP Surgical Techniques Compared IPCSG Newsletter  ·  Surgical Technique Deep-Dive  ·  March 2026 A systematic comparison of radical prostatectomy techniques evaluated against the four things patients care about most: removing the cancer completely, checking the margins, preserving urinary control, and protecting erectile function. Suturing and nerve-sparing examined in technical detail. Prepared for the IPCSG Newsletter  ·  March 2026 Bottom Line Up Front (BLUF) Radical prostatectomy has four measurable goals that matter to patients: complete cancer removal, clear surgical margins, retained urinary continence, and preserved erectile function — the "Trifecta" or "Pentafecta" standard. No single surgical approach optimizes all four simultaneously; every technique involves trade-offs. Robot-assisted radical prostatectomy (RARP) is now the dominant approach worldwide (>90% of U.S. cases), achieving better functional outcome...

Time Delay for Touch and Sight Feedback

  IPCSG Newsletter  ·  Companion Article: Robotic Surgery Science  ·  March 2026 The Missing Sense & The Speed of Surgery A quantitative look at what robotic surgeons lose when touch disappears — and what the research says about how fast the system must be to keep patients safe, whether the surgeon is in the next room or on another continent. A companion to "Surgery From 7,000 Miles Away"  ·  Prepared for the IPCSG Newsletter  ·  March 2026 Bottom Line Up Front (BLUF) Your instinct is correct and well-supported by the research literature: robotic surgery does impose a real, measurable cost from the loss of touch. Without haptic feedback, surgeons apply significantly more force to tissue — studies quantify the excess at 22% to 47% higher peak forces — and tissue damage increases correspondingly. Experienced surgeons compensate remarkably well through visual cues, but they never fully recover what ...