Single-incision robotic assisted surgery: a nonrandomized cohort pilot study on a novel surgical platform in colorectal surgery

Author:

Guo Zichao12,Shi Yiqing1,Song Zijia1,Jia Wenqing12,Wang Shaodong1,Zhang Yaqi1,Ji Xiaopin1,Liu Kun1,Zhang Tao1,Cheng Xi12,Zhao Ren12

Affiliation:

1. Department of General Surgery

2. Shanghai Institute of Digestive Surgery, Ruijin Hospital, Shanghai Jiao Tong University School of Medicine, Shanghai, People’s Republic of China

Abstract

Background: The technological barriers and steep learning curve of single-incision laparoscopic surgery had kept it from further applications. A literature review had reported that robotic technology could preserve its advantages while simplifying its difficulties. This nonrandomized cohort pilot study aims to evaluate the feasibility and safety of single-incision robotic assisted colorectal surgery based on a novel robotic surgical platform, the SHURUI Endoscopic Surgical Robotic System (SR-ENS-600). Method: This study enrolled 7 patients with colorectal malignancy who underwent single-incision robotic assisted surgery (SIRAS) at a tertiary general surgery center, and retrospectively included 23 patients who underwent robotic assisted surgery from September 2015 to June 2016 and 35 patients who underwent single-incision laparoscopic surgery from June 2017 to March 2018, which were labeled as the initial in-learning-curve attempts from the same surgical team. The technological feasibility and safety of SIRAS were evaluated. Perioperative outcomes, short-term postoperative outcomes, clinicopathologic outcomes, and follow-up were reported. Results: Six SIRAS operations were completed successfully without eventful intraoperative complications, except for one operation that encountered a large-volume of intraoperative hemorrhage. Two SIRAS cases were converted to multiport laparoscopic surgery because of intraoperative hemorrhage and difficulty in retraction. Postoperative pathology reported satisfactory specimen qualities. There were no short-term postoperative complications, no short-term mortality, no tumor recurrence, or metastasis reported. There was one incisional hernia reported half a year after operation. Patients with advanced staging were sent to standard evaluation and chemotherapy, and follow-up is still on-going. Conclusions: SIRAS can be feasibly performed by a skilled surgical team via the SR-ENS-600 platform for strictly-selected patients, which provides preferable instrument maneuverability and stability in confined surgical fields and overcomes the technical difficulty of multisite dissection through a single-incision. Large-volume investigations and high-level evidences are required to further validate its safety and superiority.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

General Medicine,Surgery

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