These three procedures dominate the conversation around BPH surgery. They sound similar. They aren't. Tap the button below to see what each procedure physically does to the prostate.
The Visual
Each diagram starts with an identical enlarged prostate. Tap "Show Result" to see what each procedure leaves behind — and why durability differs so dramatically.
Why This Matters
Procedures that completely remove the obstructing tissue have lower retreatment rates than procedures that partially remove it, which in turn have lower rates than procedures that only displace it. This is not a marketing point — it's physics. If you leave obstructing tissue behind, it continues to grow, and the problem comes back.
The three procedures aren't really competing to do the same job — they're actually different trade-offs for different patients. Choosing well means matching the procedure to your priorities.
HoLEP is the clear answer. Over a 15-year horizon, fewer than 1 in 20 HoLEP patients need any further BPH intervention. The adenoma is gone; there's nothing left to regrow. This is the standard choice for patients who want one procedure and done.
UroLift is appealing. No cutting, no catheter in many cases, same-day discharge. The trade-off: about 1 in 5 patients need something else within a decade. For younger patients with small prostates, no middle lobe, and a strong preference to preserve sexual function exactly as it is (UroLift has very low rates of retrograde ejaculation), it's a reasonable first step. Just know it may not be your last.
TURP was the standard of care for 50 years and it's a very good procedure in the hands of an experienced surgeon. For moderate-sized prostates (40–70g), TURP still performs well. For prostates over 80g, the data favors HoLEP meaningfully. If you've been offered TURP for a large prostate, it's worth getting a second opinion from a HoLEP surgeon before committing.
The animations above show the mechanical difference between procedures, but there's more to the story:
"All three of these procedures have a place in modern BPH care. The question isn't which is 'best' in the abstract — it's which matches your anatomy, priorities, and timeline."
— Dr. Brandon Childs
Dr. Childs performs HoLEP at high volume and can honestly discuss whether it's the right fit for you — or whether another procedure would be better. Consultations available in person, by phone, or by video.
Call Dr. Childs's Office (801) 432-3022