4.6 Article

Comparative early results of a robotics-assisted endoscope holder in single port thoracoscopic surgery in the era of COVID-19

Journal

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00464-022-09054-8

Keywords

Unisurgeon; Single-port VATS; Robotic camera holder; Social distancing; COVID-19

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Funding

  1. Chang Gung Memorial Hospital Research Program [CMRPG5H0032, CDRPG3J0031]
  2. Clinical Trial Center, Chang Gung Memorial Hospital, Linkou, Taiwan - Ministry of Health and Welfare of Taiwan [MOHW107-TDU-B-212-123005]

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This study evaluated the feasibility of using the unisurgeon approach in single-port video-assisted thoracoscopic surgery aided by a robotic camera holder. The results showed that in wedge resections, a single surgeon can successfully operate on all target lesions, while the success rate is lower in anatomical resections. There were no significant differences in setup times, blood loss, or operative times between the two groups.
Background Innovations in surgical instruments have made single-port surgery more widely accepted and lead to a reduced demand for surgical assistants. As COVID-19 has ravaged the world, maintaining minimum medical staffing requirements and proper social distancing have become major topics of interest. We sought to evaluate the feasibility of applying the unisurgeon approach in single-port video-assisted thoracoscopic surgery aided by a robotic camera holder. Methods Operative time, blood loss, setup time, postoperative hospital stays, and the number of participating surgeons in single-port video-assisted thoracoscopic lung resections were gathered for investigation after the introduction of the ENDOFIXexo robotic endoscope holder system. In this cohort, we collected 213 patients who underwent single port video thoracoscope surgery, including 57 patients underwent robotic endoscope arm assisted surgery and case-matched 52 patients in the robotic arm-assisted group with patients in the human-assisted group through propensity score-matched analysis. Results In wedge resection, a single surgeon was able to completely operate on all lobes of target lesions. However, for anatomical resections, namely segmentectomy, the success rate was 95%, and for lobectomy, the success rate was only 64%. No significant differences between setup times, blood loss, or operative times between the two groups were observed. Conclusions When an experienced uniport surgeon is assisted by a robotic endoscope holder, wedge resection is the most suitable procedure to be performed through unisurgeon single-port video-assisted thoracoscopic surgery without increasing setup time, operative time, or short-term complications. Verification of the technique's applicability for use in anatomic resections requires further investigation.

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