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- Title
A prospective analysis of 211 robotic-assisted surgical procedures.
- Authors
Talamini, M. A.; Chapman, S.; Horgan, S.; Melvin, W. S.; Academic Robotics Group
- Abstract
<bold>Background: </bold>The Academic Robotics Group prospectively studied 211 robotically assisted operations to assess the safety and utility of robotically assisted surgery.<bold>Methods: </bold>All operations took place at one of four member institutions between June 2000 and June 2001 using the recently FDA-approved daVinci robotic system. A variety of procedures were undertaken, including antireflux surgery (69), cholecystectomy (36), Heller myotomy (26), bowel resection (17), donor nephrectomy (15), left internal mammery artery mobilization (14), gastric bypass (seven), splenectomy (seven), adrenalectomy (six), exploratory laparoscopy (three), pyloroplasty (four), gastrojejunostomy (two), distal pancreatectomy (one), duodenal polypectomy (one), esophagectomy (one), gastric mass resection (one), and lysis of adhesions (one).<bold>Results: </bold>Average operating room time was 188 min (range 45 to 387, SD = 83), surgical time 143 min (range 35 to 462, SD = 63), and robot time 90 min (range 12 to 235, SD = 47). Median length of stay was 1 day (range 0 to 37). There were 8 (4%) technical complications during procedures, five minor (four hook cautery dislodgement, one slipped robotic trocar) and three major (system malfunctions, two of which required conversion to standard laparoscopy). In all cases, technical problems caused only delay, without apparent altered outcome. There were medical/surgical complications in nine patients (4%). Six (3%) were considered major, including one death unrelated to the robotic procedure.<bold>Conclusions: </bold>The results of robotic-assisted surgery compare favorably with those of conventional laparoscopy with respect to mortality, complications, and length of stay. Robotic-assisted surgery is safe and effective and is a new reality for American surgery. The role of these devices in surgery will expand as the technology evolves.
- Subjects
UNITED States; MEDICAL robotics; SURGERY; GASTROESOPHAGEAL reflux treatment; CHOLECYSTECTOMY; SURGICAL excision; GASTRIC bypass; COMPARATIVE studies; DIGESTIVE organ surgery; LENGTH of stay in hospitals; LONGITUDINAL method; RESEARCH methodology; MEDICAL cooperation; RESEARCH; ROBOTICS; SURGICAL complications; EVALUATION research; TREATMENT effectiveness; COMPUTER-assisted surgery; NEPHRECTOMY
- Publication
Surgical Endoscopy & Other Interventional Techniques, 2003, Vol 17, Issue 10, p1521
- ISSN
1866-6817
- Publication type
journal article
- DOI
10.1007/s00464-002-8853-3