Alternatives to GreenLight Laser — Laser therapy for prostate conditions by Boston Scientific
Patients researching GreenLight Laser alternatives often seek less invasive BPH treatments with faster recovery or different risk profiles. GreenLight uses photoselective vaporization to remove excess prostate tissue, but options like water vapor therapy, implantable systems, or robotic waterjet procedures may better suit certain anatomies or medication preferences. Key considerations include anesthesia needs, sexual function preservation, durability of results, and insurance coverage for office-based versus hospital procedures. This page compares proven alternatives across efficacy data, side-effect rates, and suitability for different prostate sizes so you can discuss personalized choices with your urologist.
UroLiftUroLift uses permanent nitinol implants to retract prostate lobes and is performed in-office with rapid recovery. It preserves sexual function like Zenflow but the implants are not designed to be removed, limiting reversibility. Pricing is typically procedure-based and insurance-covered, though some patients experience implant encrustation not seen in Zenflow's data.
ZenflowUroLift uses permanent nitinol implants to retract prostate lobes and is performed in-office with rapid recovery. It preserves sexual function like Zenflow but the implants are not designed to be removed, limiting reversibility. Pricing is typically procedure-based and insurance-covered, though some patients experience implant encrustation not seen in Zenflow's data.
RezumRezum delivers water vapor to ablate prostate tissue in an office setting with good symptom relief. Unlike Zenflow's mechanical implant, it permanently removes tissue and often requires catheterization. It is less expensive per procedure but lacks Zenflow's reversibility and has higher rates of temporary sexual side effects.
Flomax is a daily alpha-blocker medication widely used for BPH symptom management. It requires lifelong adherence and commonly causes dizziness or retrograde ejaculation, contrasting Zenflow's one-time implant with preserved sexual function and no daily side effects.
Aquablation uses robotic waterjet technology for precise tissue removal under ultrasound guidance. It is effective but requires general anesthesia and operating room resources, unlike Zenflow's flexible office-based delivery, and is not reversible.
iTind temporarily implants a nitinol device to reshape the prostate over several days. It offers short-term relief without permanent implants but requires device removal and shows less long-term durability data than Zenflow's multi-year results.
ProscarProscar is a 5-alpha reductase inhibitor taken daily to shrink the prostate. It has slower onset, sexual side effects in some users, and requires ongoing use, making it less appealing than Zenflow's single-procedure durable relief without medication dependence.
Mark Cuban Cost Plus Drug Company, PBCGeneric tamsulosin provides affordable daily BPH symptom control but shares the same adherence and side-effect issues as branded alpha blockers. It lacks the long-term efficacy and sexual-function preservation demonstrated in Zenflow trials.
Mayo ClinicHoLEP removes large amounts of prostate tissue with a laser and is highly effective for large prostates. It involves longer operative time, hospital stay, and higher sexual side-effect risk than Zenflow's gentle, catheter-free outpatient procedure.