Let $\mathcal{M}$ be a compact, connected, oriented 3-manifolds with non-empty connected boundary $\partial\mathcal{M}$. Then, following this article, it is stated that $\mathcal{M}$ can be written as
$$\mathcal{M}=P_{1}\#_{\partial}\dots\#_{\partial}P_{n}$$
where $\#_{\partial}$ denotes the boundary connected sum and where $P_{i}$ are $\partial$-prime manifolds, i.e. 3-manifolds with non-empty connected boundary, which are not homeomorphic to a 3-ball and for which a decomposition like $P=Q_{1} \#_{\partial}Q_{1}$ implies that either $Q_{1}$ or $Q_{2}$ is a closed 3-ball. So this is basically a generalization of the famous prime decomposition ("Kneser-Milnor theorem") to the case of manifolds with boundary.
Now, lets say I only consider manifolds $\mathcal{M}$ with the property that $\partial\mathcal{M}$ is homeomorphic to the 2-torus $T^{2}=S^{1}\times S^{1}$. Then, if I understand the theorem above correctly, $\mathcal{M}$ has to be a prime-manifold: Suppose that $\mathcal{M}$ can be decomposed as $\mathcal{M}=P_{1}\#_{\partial}P_{2}$ for two prime manifolds. However, the boundary connected sum has the property that $\partial\mathcal{M}=(\partial P_{1})\# (\partial P_{2})$, which is not possible in our case, since $\partial\mathcal{M}=T^{2}$ and the 2-torus cannot be obtained as the connected sum of two other manifolds.
What I am wondering is the following:
Is every compact, connected, oriented 3-manifold $\mathcal{M}$ with non-empty connected boundary $\partial\mathcal{M}\cong_{\mathrm{homeo.}} T^{2}$ of the form $$\mathcal{M}\cong_{\mathrm{homeo.}}\overline{T^{2}}\#\mathcal{N},$$ where $\overline{T^{2}}=S^{1}\times D^{2}$ denotes the solid torus and where $\mathcal{N}$ is a closed, orientable and connected 3-manifold. The connected sum here is the internal one.
(This is a follow-up question to this MathOverflow post. )