| Literature DB >> 31312621 |
Kunj R Sheth1,2, Chester J Koh1,2.
Abstract
Since the introduction of the Da Vinci Surgical System (Intuitive Surgical, Inc., Sunnyvale, CA) in 1999, the market for robot assisted laparoscopic surgery has grown with urology. The initial surgical advantage seen in adults was for robotic prostatectomy, and over time this expanded to the pediatric population with robotic pyeloplasty. The introduction of three-dimensional visualization, tremor elimination, a 4th arm, and 7-degree range of motion allowed a significant operator advantage over laparoscopy, especially for anastomotic suturing. After starting with pyeloplasty, the use of robotic technology with pediatric urology has expanded to include ureteral reimplantation and even more complex reconstructive procedures, such as enterocystoplasty, appendicovesicostomy, and bladder neck reconstruction. However, limitations of the Da Vinci Surgical Systems still exist despite its continued technological advances over multiple generations in the past 20 years. Due to the smaller pediatric market, less focus appears to have been placed on the development of the smaller 5 mm instruments. As pediatric urology continues to utilize robotic technology for minimally invasive surgery, there is hope that additional pediatric-friendly instruments and components will be developed, either by Intuitive Surgical or one of the new robotic platforms in development that are working to address many of the shortcomings of current systems. These new robotic platforms include improved haptic feedback systems, flexible scopes, easier maneuverability, and even adaptive machine learning concepts to bring robotic assisted laparoscopic surgery to the next level. In this report, we review the present and upcoming technological advances of the current Da Vinci surgical systems as well as various new robotic platforms, each offering a unique set of technological advantages. As technology progresses, the understanding of and access to these new robotic platforms will help guide pediatric urologists into the next forefront of minimally invasive surgery.Entities:
Keywords: children; heminephrectomy; laparoscopic; pediatric; pyeloplasty; robotic; ureteroureterostomy; urology
Year: 2019 PMID: 31312621 PMCID: PMC6614201 DOI: 10.3389/fped.2019.00259
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Pediatr ISSN: 2296-2360 Impact factor: 3.418
Comparison of da Vinci surgical and new robotic systems.
| Intuitive surgical | Sunnyvale, CA | Laparoscopic LESS | Commercially available | 2 HD-3D | 4 | 7 | None | Tremor filtration | |
| TransEnterix | Morrisville, NC | Laparoscopy | FDA anticipated | HD-3D (eye-tracking) | 3 | 7 | Present | Navigation, eye-tracking camera control system, individual robotic carts | |
| Medrobotics Corp | Raynham, MA | Transoral | Commercially available | HD-2D (semirigid or flexible) | 2 | 180° | None | Core flexible, steerable scope that becomes rigid once positioned | |
| Cambridge Medical Robotics Ltd. | Cambridge, UK | Laparoscopic | FDA validation | HD-3D | Up to 5 (modular) | 7 | Present | Force and position measurements > 1000x/second, up to 5 arms, lightweight | |
| Titan Medical Inc. | Toronto, ON | LESS | FDA pending | HD-3D | 1 | Multiple | None | Singe incisions, multi-articulated instruments, single arm mobile cart | |
| TransEnterix | Morrisville, NC | LESS | FDA denied, marketing in China | HD-3D | 2 | 6 | None | Internal triangulation | |
| German Aeurospace Center (DLR) | Oberpfaffenhogen-Weßling | Laparoscopy | Commercially available (not US) | HD-3D | 3–5 | 7 | Present | Easy adaptation of MIRO arms | |
| Medtronic | Minneapolis, MN | Laparoscopic | Development | – | – | – | – | Flexible use—mass utilization to decrease cost | |
| Nanyang Technological University | Singapore | NOTES | Clinical Trial | 2D endoscope | 2 | 9 | Present | For NOTES allows smaller instruments with larger forces, reconstruction navigation | |
| BIOTRONIK | Berlin, Germany | NOTES | Commercially available (not US) | N/A | 1 | 9 | None | Use in ureteroscopy and endovascular procedures | |
| Memic Innovative Surgery | Israel | Laparoscopic LESS NOTES | Development | – | Humanoid shaped arms | 360° | – | Humanoid shaped robotics arms | |
| Virtual Incision and CAST (Omaha, NA) | Omaha, NA | Advanced | Development | HD—flexible tip | 2 | 6 | None | Miniaturized unit artificial intelligence + machine learning | |
| J&J/Alphabet | Mountain View, CA | Advanced | Development | – | – | – | - | “Surgery 4.0”—digital surgery combining robotics with data-driven machine learning |