| Literature DB >> 33886065 |
Toshinori Sueda1, Mitsuyoshi Tei2, Kentaro Nishida2, Yukihiro Yoshikawa2, Tae Matsumura2, Chikato Koga2, Masaki Wakasugi2, Hiromichi Miyagaki2, Ryohei Kawabata2, Masanori Tsujie2, Junichi Hasegawa2.
Abstract
It remains controversial whether the advantages of robotic-assisted surgery are beneficial for rectal cancer (RC). The study aimed to evaluate the short-term outcomes of robotic-assisted rectal surgery (RARS) compared with those of conventional laparoscopic-assisted rectal surgery. We retrospectively analyzed 539 consecutive patients with stage I-IV RC who had undergone elective surgery between January 2010 and December 2020, using propensity score-matched analysis. After propensity score matching, we enrolled 200 patients (n = 100 in each groups). Before matching, significant group-dependent differences were observed in terms of age (p = 0.04) and body mass index (p < 0.01). After matching, clinicopathologic outcomes were similar between the groups, but estimated operative time was longer and postoperative lymphorrhea was more frequent in the RARS group. Estimated blood loss, rate of conversion to laparotomy, and incidence of anastomotic leakage or reoperation were significantly lower in the RARS group. No surgical mortality was observed in either group. No significant differences were observed in terms of positive resection margins or number of lymph nodes harvested. RARS was safe and technically feasible, and achieved acceptable short-term outcomes. The robotic technique showed some advantages in RC surgery that require validation in further studies.Entities:
Keywords: Laparoscopic-assisted surgery; Rectal cancer; Robotic-assisted surgery; Short-term outcomes
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33886065 DOI: 10.1007/s11701-021-01243-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Robot Surg ISSN: 1863-2483