Robotic Pancreaticoduodenectomy: Increased Adoption and Improved Outcomes - Is Laparoscopy Still Justified?

Autor: Hussein H. Khachfe, Ibrahim Nassour, Abdulrahman Y. Hammad, Jacob C. Hodges, Samer AlMasri, Hao Liu, Anissa deSilva, Jasmine Kraftician, Kenneth K. Lee, Henry A. Pitt, Amer H. Zureikat, Alessandro Paniccia
Rok vydání: 2022
Předmět:
Zdroj: Annals of Surgery.
ISSN: 0003-4932
Popis: To compare the rate of postoperative 30-day complications between laparoscopic and robotic pancreaticoduodenectomy.Previous studies suggest that minimally invasive pancreaticoduodenectomy (MI-PD) - either laparoscopic (LPD) or robotic (RPD) - is non-inferior to open PD in terms of operative outcomes. However, a direct comparison of the two minimally invasive approaches has not been rigorously performed.Patients who underwent MI-PD were abstracted from the 2014-2019 pancreas-targeted ACS NSQIP dataset. Optimal outcome was defined as absence of postoperative mortality, serious complication, percutaneous drainage, reoperation, and prolonged length of stay (75th percentile, 11▒d) with no readmission. Multivariable logistic regression models were used to compare optimal outcome of RPD and LPD.1,540 MI-PDs were identified between 2014-2019, of which 885 (57%) were RPD and 655 (43%) were LPD. The rate of RPD cases/year significantly increased from 2.4% to 8.4% (P=0.008) from 2014-2019, while LPD remained unchanged. Similarly, the rate of optimal outcome for RPD increased during the study period from 48.2% to 57.8% (P0.001) but significantly decreased for LPD (53.5% to 44.9%, P0.001). During 2018-2019, RPD outcomes surpassed LPD for any complication (OR 0.58, P=0.004), serious complications (OR 0.61, P=0.011), and optimal outcome (OR 1.78, P=0.001).RPD adoption increased compared to LPD and was associated with decreased overall complications, serious complications, and increased optimal outcome compared to LPD in 2018-2019.
Databáze: OpenAIRE