Utah's High-Volume HoLEP Surgeon
Holmium Laser Enucleation of the Prostate, performed by one of Utah's most experienced HoLEP surgeons. The gold standard for BPH of any prostate size — with the most durable long-term results of any prostate surgery available today.
The Procedure
HoLEP — Holmium Laser Enucleation of the Prostate — is a minimally invasive endoscopic procedure that uses a high-powered holmium laser to remove the entire obstructing portion of an enlarged prostate through the urethra. There are no external incisions. The result is a dramatic, immediate, and durable improvement in urinary flow.
For men with benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH) — the enlarged prostate condition that affects more than half of men over 60 — HoLEP is widely considered the most effective surgical solution available. Unlike older procedures such as TURP, or newer options like Rezūm or UroLift, HoLEP works regardless of prostate size, removes a larger volume of tissue, and has been shown in long-term studies to provide the most durable results of any BPH surgery.
The procedure is performed under anesthesia as an outpatient or overnight-stay surgery. A thin cystoscope is passed through the urethra. The holmium laser separates the obstructing adenoma from the prostate capsule — much like shelling the core from a piece of fruit — and the tissue is then morcellated and removed through the scope. The preserved outer capsule remains intact and continues to function normally.
Prefer to see how the procedure actually works? Step through our six-stage visual guide →
How HoLEP Compares
Most men with an enlarged prostate are offered medication first, then told about a menu of procedures if medications stop working. What most men are not told is that these procedures are not equivalent. HoLEP consistently outperforms other BPH treatments on every metric that matters for a long-term result.
| Procedure | Any Size Prostate | 10+ Year Durability | Same-Day Possible | Sexual Function |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| HoLEP | Yes | Best in class | Usually | Erections preserved · retrograde common |
| TURP | Up to ~80g | Good | Overnight typical | Erections preserved · retrograde common |
| Rezūm | Small-medium | Some retreatment | Yes | Generally preserved |
| UroLift | Small, specific anatomy | Highest retreatment rate | Yes | Generally preserved |
| Aquablation | Yes | Newer — less data | Overnight typical | Retrograde reduced |
| Optilume BPH | Small-medium | Newer — emerging data | Yes | Generally preserved |
Dr. Childs performs HoLEP, TURP, and Optilume BPH, and coordinates access to all current BPH treatments. The goal is always matching the right procedure to the right patient — not pushing a single approach. For men who want one durable procedure they are unlikely to ever need repeated, HoLEP is almost always the answer.
For a more detailed side-by-side of each treatment, see our BPH Treatment Comparison page.
Who HoLEP Is For
HoLEP is appropriate for the vast majority of men with urinary symptoms from an enlarged prostate — and uniquely capable for men whose prostates have grown too large for TURP or other minimally invasive procedures.
These are starting points, not final answers. The right procedure depends on your prostate size, symptom severity, bladder function, overall health, and personal priorities. Dr. Childs performs HoLEP alongside TURP, Optilume, and coordinates access to all current BPH procedures — so the goal of the consultation is always the right fit for you, not the most procedure.
Roughly 85–95% of men on indwelling catheters because of an enlarged prostate are catheter-free after HoLEP — even those with long-standing obstruction and seemingly "weak" bladders. If you've been told you'll always need a catheter, it's worth a second opinion before accepting that answer.
Read the 4-part catheter-dependent BPH guide →Experience Matters
HoLEP has a well-documented learning curve. Multiple studies have shown that surgeon experience — specifically the total number of HoLEP cases performed — is the single strongest predictor of outcomes, operating time, complication rates, and long-term symptom improvement.
A surgeon who performs 10 HoLEPs a year is not performing the same procedure as a surgeon who performs 200 a year. The technique demands efficient tissue-plane identification, careful hemostasis, and skilled morcellation — all of which only come from consistent repetition. This is why academic centers historically dominated HoLEP; it took volume to build competence, and most private-practice urologists did not perform the procedure at all.
Dr. Brandon Childs is a board-certified urologist who trained at Lahey Hospital and Medical Center in Boston, with additional training at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center — a Harvard Medical School affiliate. He has been in practice since September 2022 and has built one of the highest HoLEP volumes in Utah, routinely performing cases on prostates that other urologists refer out or treat with less effective procedures.
Read more about why specialist volume matters — or go directly to the comprehensive prostate evaluation to begin a proper workup.
The Patient Journey
A well-informed patient is a more relaxed patient. Here is the realistic picture of HoLEP surgery — from the first consultation through full recovery.
For detailed day-by-day post-operative instructions, see our post-operative instructions page.
Call the office and we'll walk you through what's involved — from insurance verification to scheduling a proper prostate evaluation. New patients are seen promptly.
Out-of-State Patients
A meaningful percentage of Dr. Childs's HoLEP patients travel to Utah from out of state — often from regions where high-volume HoLEP surgeons are scarce. The process is streamlined: remote pre-operative review, a coordinated 3–4 day trip, same-day catheter removal in most cases, and post-operative follow-up that can be handled by telehealth with your local urologist involved.
If you're considering traveling for HoLEP, we've built a full guide to the travel pathway, logistics, and FAQs specifically for out-of-state patients. Read the travel patient guide →
Or call the office directly at (801) 432-3022 — your first conversation with Dr. Childs can be by phone or telehealth before you book any travel.
What Patients Say
Dr. Childs's practice has earned 550+ reviews averaging 4.9 stars on Google. Below are a few representative themes from HoLEP patients specifically. These are sample quotes illustrating common patient experiences — many more full reviews are available on Google.
Questions
HoLEP is covered by Medicare, Medicaid, and all major commercial insurance plans when medically indicated. Your out-of-pocket cost depends on your specific plan's deductible, copay, and surgical facility. The office verifies your coverage and handles prior authorization before scheduling surgery so you know what to expect financially upfront.
Erectile function is preserved in the large majority of HoLEP patients. The most common sexual side effect is retrograde ejaculation — where semen travels backward into the bladder during orgasm rather than outward. This is not harmful and does not affect orgasm sensation itself, but it does affect fertility and is something every HoLEP patient should understand before surgery. Retrograde ejaculation occurs in roughly 70–80% of HoLEP patients.
If antegrade ejaculation preservation is your top priority, Rezūm, UroLift, or Optilume BPH may be more appropriate — this is discussed in detail during consultation.
Both procedures treat enlarged prostate through the urethra with no external incisions. The difference is in technique and completeness. TURP uses an electrical loop to shave tissue from the inside of the prostate. HoLEP uses a holmium laser to enucleate — cleanly remove — the entire obstructing adenoma along its natural surgical plane.
HoLEP offers less bleeding, shorter catheter time (typically less than 24 hours vs. 2–4 days), and more durable long-term results. HoLEP can also treat very large prostates (100g, 150g, 200g+) that are too large for safe TURP.
Yes — and this is actually one of HoLEP's major advantages. Because the laser seals blood vessels as it cuts, HoLEP has a substantially lower bleeding risk than TURP or open prostate surgery. Many patients on aspirin, Plavix, Eliquis, or Xarelto can undergo HoLEP with careful perioperative management. Each situation is reviewed individually with your prescribing physician.
In most cases, the catheter is removed the morning after surgery — less than 24 hours. This is one of the reasons HoLEP is preferred over TURP, which typically requires a catheter for 2–4 days. Occasionally a catheter is kept in longer for very large prostates or specific healing reasons, but this is the exception rather than the rule.
Most men with desk jobs return to work within 5–10 days. Men with physically demanding jobs typically need 2–3 weeks off to avoid heavy lifting and straining while the prostate fossa heals. Individual recovery varies — this is discussed at the pre-operative visit based on your specific situation.
No — in most cases, BPH medications like tamsulosin (Flomax), silodosin (Rapaflo), or finasteride (Proscar) are stopped after HoLEP recovery. The obstruction is physically removed, so the medications are no longer needed. This is a major quality-of-life improvement for men who have been on these medications for years and don't like the side effects.
There is no upper size limit for HoLEP — it is performed on prostates from 40g to 300g+. For prostates larger than 80g, HoLEP is clearly the best available option, as TURP and most minimally invasive procedures become less effective or unsafe at that size. For smaller prostates, HoLEP is still excellent but other options may also be reasonable depending on your priorities.
Every surgery carries risk. The main risks of HoLEP include: temporary urinary urgency or leakage during the healing phase, bleeding (usually minor), urinary tract infection, urethral stricture in a small percentage of patients, and rarely, persistent stress incontinence. Most of these risks are lower with HoLEP than with TURP. All risks are discussed thoroughly at the pre-operative visit.
HoLEP has the most durable long-term results of any BPH procedure. Because the entire obstructing adenoma is removed — not just partially shaved or heat-treated — the tissue cannot grow back in the same way. Long-term studies show the vast majority of HoLEP patients never need a second BPH procedure in their lifetime. This is a key reason the procedure is often described as "definitive."
Most men wait too long to address BPH. A single phone call starts the process — we'll help you figure out the right next step, whether that's a full evaluation or simply some reassurance.