| Literature DB >> 35057836 |
Nicola de'Angelis1,2, Jim Khan3, Francesco Marchegiani4, Giorgio Bianchi5, Filippo Aisoni5, Daniele Alberti6, Luca Ansaloni7, Walter Biffl8, Osvaldo Chiara9, Graziano Ceccarelli10, Federico Coccolini11, Enrico Cicuttin11, Mathieu D'Hondt12, Salomone Di Saverio13, Michele Diana14,15, Belinda De Simone16, Eloy Espin-Basany17, Stefan Fichtner-Feigl18, Jeffry Kashuk19, Ewout Kouwenhoven20, Ari Leppaniemi21, Nassiba Beghdadi5,22, Riccardo Memeo23, Marco Milone24, Ernest Moore25, Andrew Peitzmann26, Patrick Pessaux27,28,29, Manos Pikoulis30, Michele Pisano31, Frederic Ris32, Massimo Sartelli33, Giuseppe Spinoglio34, Michael Sugrue35, Edward Tan36, Paschalis Gavriilidis37, Dieter Weber38, Yoram Kluger39, Fausto Catena40.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Robotics represents the most technologically advanced approach in minimally invasive surgery (MIS). Its application in general surgery has increased progressively, with some early experience reported in emergency settings. The present position paper, supported by the World Society of Emergency Surgery (WSES), aims to provide a systematic review of the literature to develop consensus statements about the potential use of robotics in emergency general surgery.Entities:
Keywords: Emergency surgery; General surgery; Minimally invasive surgery; Robotic surgery
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35057836 PMCID: PMC8781145 DOI: 10.1186/s13017-022-00410-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: World J Emerg Surg ISSN: 1749-7922 Impact factor: 5.469
Fig. 1Flowchart of the literature search and selection
Studies reporting on urgent/emergent general surgery interventions performed with a robotic approach
| References | Study design | Nb. of patients | Time period | Pathology | Intervention | Robotic platform | Outcomes | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hosein et al. [ | Retrospective cohort study | 131 robotic cases 719 open cases 1517 laparoscopic cases | January 2015–December 2017 | Hiatal hernia | Hiatal hernia repair | Unknown | Perioperative outcomes | Trend towards better outcomes in minimally invasive surgery (laparoscopic and robotic) as compared to open approach |
| Kubat et al. [ | Retrospective cohort study | 76 robotic (elective) cases 74 robotic (urgent) cases | May 2001–August 2013 | Acute cholecystitis, choledocholithiasis, severe chronic cholecystitis | Robotic single-site cholecystectomy | Intuitive Surgical da Vinci Si™ | Perioperative outcomes and learning curve | Robotic single-site cholecystectomy is safe and can be applied to urgent and elective settings with acceptable perioperative outcomes. Learning curve of 50 cases |
| Robinson et al. [ | Retrospective cohort study | 4 robotic cases 0 laparoscopic cases | 2015–2019 | Perforated gastrojejunal ulcers following Roux-en-Y gastric bypass surgery | Repairs of perforated gastrojejunal ulcers | Intuitive Surgical da Vinci Si™/Xi™ | Perioperative outcomes | Outcomes are non-inferior to laparoscopy with the use of the robot. In-room-to-surgery time is reduced in the robotic group. Costs are greater in the robotic group |
| Anderson et al. [ | Retrospective cohort study on a prospective database | 6 robotic cases 13 laparoscopic cases | February 2015–February 2017 | Severe acute ulcerative colitis | Subtotal colectomy | Intuitive Surgical da Vinci Xi™ | Feasibility and perioperative outcomes | Robotic subtotal colectomy has similar perioperative outcomes of laparoscopic subtotal colectomy |
| Kudsi et al. [ | Case series | 34 robotic cases | February 2013–November 2019 | Ventral hernia | Robotic ventral hernia repair | Intuitive Surgical da Vinci™ | Perioperative outcomes and mid-term follow-up | Robotic ventral hernia repair is effective in the emergency setting |
| Ceccarelli et al. [ | Case series | 3 robotic cases | December 2009–December 2019 | Giant hiatal hernia | Hernia repair ± fundoplication | Intuitive Surgical da Vinci Xi™ | Perioperative outcomes | Uneventful postoperative course in patients, one patient developed an antrum stenosis due to preoperative mucosal ischemia |
| Milone et al. [ | Case series | 3 robotic cases | 2019 | Moderate acute calculous cholecystitis | Robotic cholecystectomy | Intuitive Surgical da Vinci Si™ | Perioperative outcomes | Uneventful postoperative course |
| Sudan et al. [ | Case report | Robotic cases | 2001 | Complications of biliopancreatic diversion with duodenal switch | Robotic strictureplasty Robotic suture of duodenal stump | Intuitive Surgical da Vinci Si™ | Perioperative outcomes | Uneventful postoperative course |
| Felli et al. [ | Case report | 1 robotic case | 2014 | Hemorrhagic right colon cancer | Robotic right colectomy with double-barreled ileocolostomy | Intuitive Surgical da Vinci Si™ | Perioperative outcomes | Uneventful postoperative course. At 5 months of follow-up, no recurrence was noted |
| Pedraza et al. [ | Case report | 1 robotic case | 2001 | Iatrogenic colonoscopy perforation | Robotic colorrhaphy | Intuitive Surgical da Vinci Si™ | Perioperative outcomes | Uneventful postoperative course |
Quality assessment for the selected retrospective cohort studies according to the Newcastle Ottawa Scale (NOS)
| References | Selection | Comparability | Outcome/exposure | Overall score |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kubat et al. [ | *** | – | *** | 6/9 |
| Anderson et al. [ | **** | * | *** | 8/9 |
| Kudsi et al. [ | *** | – | *** | 6/9 |
| Hosein et al. [ | *** | * | *** | 7/9 |
| Robinson et al. [ | **** | * | *** | 8/9 |
Quality assessment for the selected case series/case reports according to Murad et al. [16]
| References | Selection | Ascertainment | Causality | Reporting | Overall score |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pedraza et al. [ | * | ** | ** | * | 6/8 |
| Sudan et al. [ | * | ** | ** | * | 6/8 |
| Felli et al. [ | * | ** | ** | * | 6/8 |
| Milone et al. [ | * | ** | ** | * | 6/8 |
| Ceccarelli et al. [ | * | ** | ** | * | 6/8 |