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The Availability, Cost, Limitations, Learning Curve and Future of Robotic Systems in Urology and Prostate Cancer Surgery

Journal

JOURNAL OF CLINICAL MEDICINE
Volume 12, Issue 6, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/jcm12062268

Keywords

robotic surgery; learning curves; prostatectomy; robotic systems

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Robot-assisted surgical systems (RASS) have transformed the management of urological conditions, particularly with robot-assisted radical prostatectomy (RARP) becoming the preferred approach. The market has opened up to new contenders as patents expire, leading to increased competition and potentially lower costs. Despite barriers such as learning curves and training, advancements in technology and dedicated training programs have improved accessibility. Comprehensive research has shown improved outcomes and the rapid developments in robot-assisted surgery indicate a promising new era in urological surgery.
Robot-assisted surgical systems (RASS) have revolutionised the management of many urological conditions over the last two decades with robot-assisted radical prostatectomy (RARP) now being considered by many to be the preferred surgical approach. Intuitive Surgical has dominated the market during this time period with successive iterations of the da Vinci model. The expiration of patents has opened the RASS market and several new contenders have become available or are currently in development. This comprehensive narrative review aims to explore the merits of each robotic system as well as the evidence and barriers to their use. The newly developed RASS have increased the versality of robotic surgical systems to a wider range of settings through advancement in technology. The increased competition may result in an overall reduction in cost, broadening the accessibility of RASS. Learning curves and training remain a barrier to their use, but the situation appears to be improving through dedicated training programmes. Outcomes for RARP have been well investigated and tend to support improved early functional outcomes. Overall, the rapid developments in the field of robot-assisted surgery indicate the beginning of a promising new era to further enhance urological surgery.

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