4.4 Article

Transition from laparoscopic to robotic approach in rectal cancer: a single-center short-term analysis based on the learning curve

Journal

UPDATES IN SURGERY
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

SPRINGER-VERLAG ITALIA SRL
DOI: 10.1007/s13304-023-01655-9

Keywords

Rectal cancer; Robotic surgery; CUSUM; Learning curve; Oncological outcomes

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This study aimed to evaluate the safety and oncological outcomes of the learning process of robotic rectal surgery and compare it with laparoscopic rectal resections. The study concluded that the learning phase of robotic rectal cancer surgery in experienced laparoscopic surgeons is completed after 25-35 cases. Implementation of a robotic rectal surgery program is safe in terms of oncologic results, morbidity, mortality, and length of stay.
As a novel procedure becomes more and more used, knowledge about its learning curve and its impact on outcomes is useful for future implementations. Our aim is (i) to identify the phases of the robotic rectal surgery learning process and assess the safety and oncological outcomes during that period, (ii) to compare the robotic rectal surgery learning phases outcomes with laparoscopic rectal resections performed before the implementation of the robotic surgery program. We performed a retrospective study, based on a prospectively maintained database, with methodological quality assessment by STROBE checklist. All the procedures were performed by the same two surgeons. A total of 157 robotic rectal resections from June 2018 to January 2022 and 97 laparoscopic rectal resections from January 2018 to July 2019 were included. The learning phase was completed at case 26 for surgeon A, 36 for surgeon B, and 60 for the center (both A & B). There were no differences in histopathological results or postoperative complications between phases, achieving the same ratio of mesorectal quality, circumferential and distal resection margins as the laparoscopic approach. A transitory increase of major complications and anastomotic leakage could occur once overcoming the learning phase, secondary to the progressive complexity of cases. Robotic rectal cancer surgery learning curve phases in experienced laparoscopic surgeons was completed after 25-35 cases. Implementation of a robotic rectal surgery program is safe in oncologic terms, morbidity, mortality and length of stay.

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