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International multicentre propensity score-matched analysis comparing robotic versus laparoscopic right posterior sectionectomy

Authors
 Adrian K H Chiow  ;  David Fuks  ;  Gi-Hong Choi  ;  Nicholas Syn  ;  Iswanto Sucandy  ;  Marco V Marino  ;  Mikel Prieto  ;  Charing C Chong  ;  Jae Hoon Lee  ;  Mikhail Efanov  ;  T Peter Kingham  ;  Sung Hoon Choi  ;  Robert P Sutcliffe  ;  Roberto I Troisi  ;  Johann Pratschke  ;  Tan-To Cheung  ;  Xiaoying Wang  ;  Rong Liu  ;  Mathieu D'Hondt  ;  Chung-Yip Chan  ;  Chung Ngai Tang  ;  Ho-Seong Han  ;  Brian K P Goh 
Citation
 BRITISH JOURNAL OF SURGERY, Vol.108(12) : 1513-1520, 2021-12 
Journal Title
BRITISH JOURNAL OF SURGERY
ISSN
 0007-1323 
Issue Date
2021-12
MeSH
Aged ; Blood Loss, Surgical / statistics & numerical data ; Blood Transfusion / statistics & numerical data ; Conversion to Open Surgery / statistics & numerical data ; Female ; Hepatectomy / methods* ; Humans ; Laparoscopy* ; Male ; Matched-Pair Analysis ; Middle Aged ; Operative Time ; Propensity Score ; Retrospective Studies ; Robotic Surgical Procedures*
Abstract
Background: Minimally invasive right posterior sectionectomy (RPS) is a technically challenging procedure. This study was designed to determine outcomes following robotic RPS (R-RPS) and laparoscopic RPS (L-RPS).

Methods: An international multicentre retrospective analysis of patients undergoing R-RPS versus those who had purely L-RPS at 21 centres from 2010 to 2019 was performed. Patient demographics, perioperative parameters, and postoperative outcomes were analysed retrospectively from a central database. Propensity score matching (PSM) was performed, with analysis of 1 : 2 and 1 : 1 matched cohorts.

Results: Three-hundred and forty patients, including 96 who underwent R-RPS and 244 who had L-RPS, met the study criteria and were included. The median operating time was 295 minutes and there were 25 (7.4 per cent) open conversions. Ninety-seven (28.5 per cent) patients had cirrhosis and 56 (16.5 per cent) patients required blood transfusion. Overall postoperative morbidity rate was 22.1 per cent and major morbidity rate was 6.8 per cent. The median postoperative stay was 6 days. After 1 : 1 matching of 88 R-RPS and L-RPS patients, median (i.q.r.) blood loss (200 (100-400) versus 450 (200-900) ml, respectively; P < 0.001), major blood loss (> 500 ml; P = 0.001), need for intraoperative blood transfusion (10.2 versus 23.9 per cent, respectively; P = 0.014), and open conversion rate (2.3 versus 11.4 per cent, respectively; P = 0.016) were lower in the R-RPS group. Similar results were found in the 1 : 2 matched groups (66 R-RPS versus 132 L-RPS patients).

Conclusion: R-RPS and L-RPS can be performed in expert centres with good outcomes in well selected patients. R-RPS was associated with reduced blood loss and lower open conversion rates than L-RPS.
Full Text
https://academic.oup.com/bjs/article/108/12/1513/6423583
DOI
10.1093/bjs/znab321
Appears in Collections:
1. College of Medicine (의과대학) > Dept. of Surgery (외과학교실) > 1. Journal Papers
Yonsei Authors
Choi, Gi Hong(최기홍) ORCID logo https://orcid.org/0000-0002-1593-3773
URI
https://ir.ymlib.yonsei.ac.kr/handle/22282913/190656
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