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Innovative Urology — Domenico Savatta, MDBook
Large-prostate BPH comparison

HoLEP and robotic simple prostatectomy are both large-prostate conversations, but they are not the same operation.

The patient searching HoLEP vs robotic simple prostatectomy has usually moved beyond medication and office procedures. This page explains how two tissue-removal strategies are compared for large or complex BPH while keeping the recommendation tied to anatomy, surgeon experience, and patient risk.

Both options are used when BPH needs more than an office procedure.

HoLEP removes tissue through the urethra; robotic simple prostatectomy removes the adenoma through an abdominal robotic approach.

Surgeon experience and prostate anatomy matter more than the procedure name alone.

Guide focus

Built to beat research-only comparison results

The live search is often dominated by studies. This page turns that evidence lane into a patient-ready decision guide for New Jersey men with very large prostates.

Patient language

It explains the difference without making the patient read a journal article first.

Local proof

It ties robotic simple prostatectomy to Dr. Savatta's robotic authority and BPH pathway.

Selection nuance

It avoids saying one operation is always better and focuses on anatomy, setting, and skill.

Questions before choosing a large-prostate operation

  • How large is the prostate and what is the shape?
  • Is a transurethral or robotic abdominal approach more appropriate?
  • What surgeon experience is available for each option?
  • What catheter and recovery timeline should I expect?
  • How will pathology, PSA, and follow-up be handled?

What changes the HoLEP vs robotic decision?

Decision factor

Prostate volume and shape

Very large glands, median lobe, and complex anatomy can shift the recommendation.

Approach

HoLEP is transurethral; robotic simple prostatectomy is abdominal robotic surgery.

Surgeon experience

Both choices are technique-dependent and should match the surgeon's skill set.

Bleeding and medical history

Blood thinners, retention, stones, and other factors change surgical planning.

Hospital and anesthesia path

Estimates should include facility, anesthesia, catheter, testing, and follow-up.

What the two operations have in common

HoLEP and robotic simple prostatectomy are both discussed when obstruction is significant enough that a tissue-removal operation is being considered.

Both require a real preoperative evaluation. That can include prostate sizing, PSA context, bladder-emptying assessment, cystoscopy, imaging, medication review, and cancer-risk questions.

How HoLEP differs

HoLEP removes obstructing prostate adenoma through the urethra using laser enucleation. It can be discussed for large glands when an experienced HoLEP surgeon and the right setting are available.

Patients should ask about catheter timing, temporary urinary leakage, bleeding, pathology, and how often the surgeon performs the procedure.

How robotic simple prostatectomy differs

Robotic simple prostatectomy removes the obstructing inner adenoma through an abdominal robotic approach while leaving the outer prostate capsule in place. It is not the same as radical prostatectomy for cancer.

This is where Dr. Savatta's robotic surgery history matters for Innovative Urology. The page should position the practice for large-prostate searches without claiming robotic surgery is always the right answer.

Large-prostate treatment paths

HoLEP

Large or obstructing prostates when transurethral enucleation is appropriate and expertise is available.

Ask about facility, anesthesia, catheter, pathology, and follow-up.

Robotic simple prostatectomy

Very large or complex glands where robotic abdominal removal is appropriate.

Hospital episode costs should be estimated together.

TURP

Selected men whose prostate size and anatomy fit traditional transurethral resection.

May not be the preferred path for very large glands.

UroLift or Rezum

Selected men whose anatomy fits a less invasive option.

Lower-intensity care does not help if anatomy is too large or complex.

Next step for New Jersey patients

Request a consultation if these questions match your symptoms, diagnosis, or treatment decision. Innovative Urology serves patients from Westfield, Summit, Short Hills, Millburn, Livingston, Edison, Woodbridge, Morristown, and nearby New Jersey communities.

Continue your decision path

Related treatment, comparison, local, and patient pages.

Prepare for the consultation

Bring the information that helps compare the right BPH procedure.

You do not need to choose TURP, HoLEP, Aquablation, or robotic surgery before the visit. The goal is to give the urologist enough context to explain which options fit and why.

Do not send medical history through a public website form. Clinical details belong in the practice’s approved patient workflow.

Information to locate

  • Recent imaging or a report that includes prostate size, if one exists.
  • A list of prior BPH medicines or procedures and what changed afterward.
  • Any history of catheter use, urinary retention, bladder stones, bleeding, or prior prostate surgery.
  • Your current insurance information and preferred hospital or facility questions.

Questions worth asking

  • Which options fit the prostate size, anatomy, bladder function, and treatment goals?
  • Why would a transurethral approach or robotic approach be favored in this case?
  • What are the expected catheter, hospital, activity, and follow-up plans?
  • Which surgeon, facility, anesthesia, and insurance charges should be confirmed?

HoLEP vs robotic simple prostatectomy questions

Is HoLEP better than robotic simple prostatectomy?

Not automatically. Both can be strong options for selected patients, but the right choice depends on prostate anatomy, surgeon experience, medical history, and goals.

Is robotic simple prostatectomy cancer surgery?

No. It is a BPH operation for benign obstruction. Radical prostatectomy is the prostate cancer operation.

Should cost decide between HoLEP and robotic surgery?

Cost matters, but the first decision is medical fit. A mismatched operation can lead to persistent symptoms, complications, or another procedure.

Sources

Consultation

The right next step depends on the diagnosis, not a generic search result.

Start with a consultation request. Please keep medical history out of the public form; clinical details move to a secure channel after intake.

Please do not include medical information in your initial message. We’ll move clinical details to a secure channel after first contact.