1. Combined endoscopic robotic surgery for complex colonic polyp resection: case series
- Author
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Jacob M. Broome, Austin T. Jones, and Matthew D. Zelhart
- Subjects
Laparoscopic surgery ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Transverse colon ,Sigmoid colon ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Tubular adenoma ,medicine ,Ascending colon ,Robotic surgery ,business ,Abdominal surgery ,Sessile serrated adenoma - Abstract
The study objective was to evaluate combined endoscopic and robotic surgery, a novel surgical technique modifying traditional combined endoscopic laparoscopic surgery through robotic assistance, and characterize a series of patients who underwent the modified operative technique. A retrospective case series was performed. The first thirty-seven consecutive patients who underwent combined endoscopic robotic surgery by a single colorectal surgeon from March 2018 to October 2019 were included. Main outcome measures included operative time, intra-operative complication, 30-day post-operative complication, and hospital length of stay. Combined endoscopic and robotic surgery was performed in 37 cases, 32 (86.5%) of which saw the technique through to completion. Median operative room time was 73 min (range 31–184 min). No intraoperative complications occurred and 2 (6.3%) experienced 30-day post-operative complications. Median hospital length of stay was 1.1 days (range 0.2–2.0 days). Median polyp size was 35 mm (range 20–130 mm). Polyps were resected from the following locations: cecum (37.5%), ascending colon (28.1%), transverse colon (21.9%), descending colon (3.1%), sigmoid colon (6.3%), and rectum (3.1%). Pathology demonstrated 77.4% tubular adenoma, 12.9% sessile serrated adenoma, 6.5% dysplasia, and 3.2% signet cell adenocarcinoma. Combined endoscopic robotic surgery was associated with decreased operative time, complication rates, and hospital length of stay compared to literature-reported statistics for combined endoscopic laparoscopic surgery. Increased confidence with 3-dimensional visualization and intracorporeal suturing using combined endoscopic and robotic surgery was noted. Additional studies are needed to further define the role of robotics in combined endoscopic surgery.
- Published
- 2021
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