Professor Pioneers New Treatment for Enlarged Prostate at Charing Cross


Rezum could improve lives of one in three men over 50 with common condition

Professor Hashim Ahmed, a consultant at Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust has become one of the first to perform a new treatment which could improve the lives of thousands of men living with the effects of an enlarged prostate.

The new technique, called Rezum Water Vapour was performed by Professor Ahmed (pictured above) yesterday, Thursday 3 August at Charing Cross Hospital.

It aims to replace a procedure which takes over an hour and includes two to three days in hospital with a 10-15 minute procedure under sedation/local anaesthetic with patients able to go home that same day.

Symptoms of an enlarged prostate can include needing to visit the toilet more frequently and with more urgency and experiencing difficulty emptying your bladder. The condition affects one in three men over the age of 50. Thousands of men have the traditional operation, called a transurethral resection of the prostate (TURP) by electrocautery or laser every year.

The new procedure, which is called Rezum Water Vapour, injects small amounts of steam into the prostate. The steaming process permeates throughout the tissue which then allows the gland to shrink as it repairs itself, relieving men of symptoms.

Yesterday's procedure was the first time the treatment was performed in London and only the second time in the UK.

Professor Hashim Ahmed says: "It’s great that we can now offer a treatment which is less invasive and carries less side effects for our patients.

"This treatment will not only be a better alternative for men facing a longer procedure with added recovery time but we can also offer to those who are on life-long medication who opted not to have surgery because they were worried about side effects of traditional surgery."

You can read more about Rezum and its benefits here.

August 4, 2017