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Robotic versus laparoscopic radical nephrectomy: a large multi-institutional analysis (ROSULA Collaborative Group)

Authors :
Robert G. Uzzo
Michele Marchioni
Clayton Lau
Michele Gallucci
Ahmet Bindayi
Giuseppe Simone
Giuseppe Quarto
Francesco Porpiglia
Kidon Chang
Miguel Ramírez-Backhaus
Alexander Kutikov
Chao Zhang
Michael Liao
Alexandre Mottrie
Uzoma A. Anele
Umberto Capitanio
Jay Sulek
Ben Challacombe
Wesley M. White
James R. Porter
Francesco Berardinelli
Ken Jacobsohn
Cristian Fiori
Maria Carmen Mir
Peter Langenstroer
Andrea Minervini
Patrick Kilday
Ithaar Derweesh
Nicolo de Luyk
Bo Yang
Koon Ho Rha
Prokar Dasgupta
Andrea Mari
Luigi Schips
Lance J. Hampton
Chandru P. Sundaram
Alessandro Larcher
Monish Aron
Akbar Ashrafi
Sisto Perdonà
Riccardo Autorino
Anele, Uzoma A.
Marchioni, Michele
Yang, Bo
Simone, Giuseppe
Uzzo, Robert G.
Lau, Clayton
Mir, Maria C.
Capitanio, Umberto
Porter, Jame
Jacobsohn, Ken
de Luyk, Nicolo
Mari, Andrea
Chang, Kidon
Fiori, Cristian
Sulek, Jay
Mottrie, Alexandre
White, Wesley
Perdona, Sisto
Quarto, Giuseppe
Bindayi, Ahmet
Ashrafi, Akbar
Schips, Luigi
Berardinelli, Francesco
Zhang, Chao
Gallucci, Michele
Ramirez-Backhaus, Miguel
Larcher, Alessandro
Kilday, Patrick
Liao, Michael
Langenstroer, Peter
Dasgupta, Prokar
Challacombe, Ben
Kutikov, Alexander
Minervini, Andrea
Rha, Koon Ho
Sundaram, Chandru P.
Hampton, Lance J.
Porpiglia, Francesco
Aron, Monish
Derweesh, Ithaar
Autorino, Riccardo
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Springer Verlag, 2019.

Abstract

Objective: To compare the outcomes of robotic radical nephrectomy (RRN) to those of laparoscopic radical nephrectomy (LRN) for large renal masses. Methods: This was a retrospective analysis of RRN and LRN cases performed for large (≥ cT2) renal masses from 2004 to 2017 and collected in the multi-institutional international database (ROSULA: RObotic SUrgery for LArge renal masses). Peri-operative, functional, and oncologic outcomes were compared between each approach. Descriptive analyses were performed and presented as medians with interquartile ranges. Inverse probability of treatment weighting-adjusted multivariable analyses were used to identify predictors of peri-operative complications. Kaplan–Meier analysis and Cox regression models were used to assess survival outcomes. Results: A total of 941 patients (RRN = 404, LRN = 537) were identified. There was no difference in terms of gender, age, and clinical tumor size. Over the study period, RRN had an annual increase of 11.75% (95% CI [7.34, 17.01] p < 0.001) and LRN had an annual decline of 5.39% (95% CI [−6.94, −3.86] p < 0.001). Patients undergoing RRN had higher BMI (27.6 [IQR 24.8–31.1] vs. 26.5 [24.1–30.0] kg/m 2 , p < 0.01). Operative duration was longer for RRN (185.0 [150.0–237.2] vs. 126 [90.8–180.0] min, p < 0.001). Length of stay was shorter for RRN (3.0 [2.0–4.0] vs. 5.0 [4.0–7.0] days, p < 0.001). RRN cases presented more advanced disease (higher pathologic staging [pT3–4 52.5 vs. 24.2%, p < 0.001], histologic grade [high grade 49.3 vs. 30.4%, p < 0.001], and rate of nodal disease [pN1 5.4 vs. 1.9%, p < 0.01]). Surgical approach did not represent an independent risk factor for peri-operative complications (OR 1.81 95% CI [0.97–3.39], adjusted p = 0.2). The main study limitation is the retrospective design. Conclusions: This study represents the largest known multi-center comparison between RRN and LRN. The two procedures seem to offer similar peri-operative outcomes. Notably, RRN has been increasingly utilized, especially in the setting of more advanced and surgically challenging disease without increasing the risk of peri-operative complications.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....e7770463f2bbe6d88534c708a176c53e