UK-ROPE outcomes demonstrate value of registries
The positive outcomes from the UK-ROPE (Registry of prostate embolization) – a collaboration initiated by British Society of Interventional Radiology (BSIR) and Dendrite Clinical Systems – has resulted in a National Institute of Health and Care Excellence (NICE) recommendation that prostate artery embolization (PAE) should be made available by the NHS. The registry was jointly funded by the National Institute of Health and Care Excellence (NICE), the British Society of Interventional Radiology (BSIR), the British Association of Urological Surgeons (BAUS) and Cook Medical.
UK-ROPE utilised Dendrite’s unique ‘Intellect Web’ national registry software to facilitate on-line data entry. The Registry was accessed using a range of modern html-5 compatible web browsers, allowing registrants to enter data securely without the need to install additional software or perform any complex system configurations.
“I would like to congratulate the investigators of ROPE on the outcomes of the registry,” said Dr Peter Walton, Managing Director of Dendrite Clinical Systems. “The outcomes from ROPE and recommendation by NICE again demonstrates the power of ‘real world’ data from clinical registries.”
Prostate artery embolization or benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH) is used to treat non-cancerous enlargement of the prostate, a very common condition in older men, and blocks some of the blood supply to the prostate using tiny synthetic beads, causing the troublesome tissue to shrink and die, and importantly, spares patients from undergoing surgery and potential side-effects such as impotence.
When compared directly with a matched cohort of men undergoing transurethral resection of the prostate (TURP), patients who underwent embolization had less hospital stay, fewer erectile function problems, improved urinary flow and an average reduction of prostate size of nearly 30%.
"It (PAE) is a particularly good option for men who are not yet ready to undergo more invasive prostate surgery. Maintaining sexual function and fertility is one of its main strengths,” Dr Nigel Hacking, Chairman & clinical lead for the UK-ROPE Standing Committee and consultant interventional radiologist at University Hospital Southampton, told the BBC. "I hope with NICE's recommendations, that more centres will be able to introduce PAE services in the not too distant future."
Since 1993, Dendrite Clinical Systems has been developing specialist clinical databases, analysis software, consultancy and publishing services that empower the international healthcare sector with the data they need. The company now has two offices in the UK and agents across four continents, and has expanded its global user base across hundreds of hospitals, with over 170 national and international registries in more than 40 countries.
The Fifth IFSO Global Registry Report (2019) has been released at the XXIV World Congress of the International Federation for the Surgery of Obesity and Metabolic Disorders (IFSO) in Madrid, Spain. Published by Dendrite Clinical Systems, under the auspices of the IFSO, the publication reports data from more than 60 countries on over 833,000 operations including baseline obesity-related disease, operation types, operative outcomes and disease status after bariatric surgery.
Dendrite Clinical Systems has announced the installation of its National Bariatric Surgical Registry software at the Sheik Al Jaber Al Sabah Hospital, in Kuwait. The Sheik Al Jaber Al Sabah Hospital, opened by His Highness the Amir Sheikh Sabah Al-Ahmad Al- Jaber Al-Sabah in November 2018, consists of five towering 10-stories structures built on a 220,000 square meters and has a hospital bed capacity of around 1,160 with 36 operation rooms, a medical centre, a helipad and a parking lot accommodating some 5,000 vehicles.
Dendrite Clinical Systems and the Queen Mary Hospital in Hong Kong have launched the Asian Hypospadias Outcome Registry (AHOR), is a prospective web-based patient registry that will collect, record and analyse the treatment and outcomes of patients undergoing surgical repair.
Dendrite Clinical Systems has launched its ‘One-button push’ outcomes module, allowing clinicians to instantly produce their outcomes with the push of a single button. This enhancement is the latest in a series of advances incorporated into the company’s clinical registry software.
Dendrite Clinical Systems, the publisher of Bariatric News, is pleased to announce issue 40 of the newspaper is now available to view/download. The newspaper reports on research, technology, events and policy in the bariatric specialty, the latest clinical studies, policy changes and product news, the latest meetings and events, interviews prominent bariatric experts, and host debates between specialists on controversial topics.
Dendrite Clinical Systems – in collaboration with Haemotology Cancer Care (UCLH Charity), the Royal Free Charity, HaemSTAR (an organisation researching non-malignant haematology) and MPN Voice – have launched the MASCOT (Myeloproliferative Neoplasm Splanchnic Vein Thrombosis, MPN-SVT) Registry, a UK wide registry for patients with myeloproliferative diseases suffering from splanchnic or abdominal vein thrombosis.


