Cargando…

An optimized robotic surgical technique for cervical cancer: investigating whether the use of the pulling robotic arm has better surgical outcomes

OBJECTIVE: The evidence for adopting the 3(rd) robotic arm (RA) called the pulling RA rather than a uterine manipulator to manipulate the uterus in the robotic radical hysterectomy (RRH) for cervical cancer is still limited. We present a single-center retrospective experience comparing using the pul...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Liang, Xuzhi, He, Haijing, Li, Yingjin, Chen, Sibang, Zhao, Jinche, Yang, Bing, Lin, Huisi, Zeng, Hao, Wei, Liuyi, Yang, Jiahuang, Fan, Jiangtao
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10358761/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37483489
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fonc.2023.1159081
_version_ 1785075734676504576
author Liang, Xuzhi
He, Haijing
Li, Yingjin
Chen, Sibang
Zhao, Jinche
Yang, Bing
Lin, Huisi
Zeng, Hao
Wei, Liuyi
Yang, Jiahuang
Fan, Jiangtao
author_facet Liang, Xuzhi
He, Haijing
Li, Yingjin
Chen, Sibang
Zhao, Jinche
Yang, Bing
Lin, Huisi
Zeng, Hao
Wei, Liuyi
Yang, Jiahuang
Fan, Jiangtao
author_sort Liang, Xuzhi
collection PubMed
description OBJECTIVE: The evidence for adopting the 3(rd) robotic arm (RA) called the pulling RA rather than a uterine manipulator to manipulate the uterus in the robotic radical hysterectomy (RRH) for cervical cancer is still limited. We present a single-center retrospective experience comparing using the pulling RA to replace a uterine manipulator vs. using a uterine manipulator to manipulate the uterus in RRH. METHODS: 106 patients diagnosed with IA, IB1-IB2 and IIA1 cervical cancer were retrospectively included for intraoperative and postoperative parameters analysis. 50 patients received RRH by adopting the pulling RA instead of a uterine manipulator to pull the uterus (3-RA RRH group), and another 56 patients were performed RRH with a uterine manipulator (2-RA RRH group). RRH with the pulling RA consisted of a camera arm, 3 RAs including a pulling RA, and 2 conventional assistant arms (3-RA RRH group). In comparison, RRH with a uterine manipulator included 2 RAs and 2 conventional assistant arms (2-RA RRH group). Besides, 3-RA’ RRH group was selected from the 25(th)-50(th) cases in the 3-RA RRH group based on the learning curve and was compared with the 2-RA RRH group in terms of intraoperative and postoperative parameters. RESULTS: The patients’ early post-operative complication (≤7 days) (p=0.022) and post-operative anemia (p < 0.001) of the 3-RA RRH were significantly lower than that in the 2-RA RRH group. The results of comparing the 2-RA RRH group with the 3-RA’ RRH group were consistent with the aforementioned results, except for the operative time (220.4 vs. 197.4 minutes, p=0.022) and hospital stay (7.8 vs. 8.7 days, p=0.034). The median follow-up in the 3-RA RRH and 2-RA RRH groups was 29 and 50 months till March 2023. The 3-RA RRH and 2-RA RRH groups’ recurrence rates were 2% (1/50) and 5.4% (3/56), respectively. The mortality in the 3-RA RRH and 2-RA RRH groups was 2% (1/50) and 3.5% (2/56), respectively. CONCLUSION: Our study suggested that replacing the uterine manipulator via the 3(rd) RA is viable; the results showed comparable surgical outcomes between the two methods. Thus, 3-RA RRH could be considered a well-executed surgical option in well-selected patients.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-10358761
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2023
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-103587612023-07-21 An optimized robotic surgical technique for cervical cancer: investigating whether the use of the pulling robotic arm has better surgical outcomes Liang, Xuzhi He, Haijing Li, Yingjin Chen, Sibang Zhao, Jinche Yang, Bing Lin, Huisi Zeng, Hao Wei, Liuyi Yang, Jiahuang Fan, Jiangtao Front Oncol Oncology OBJECTIVE: The evidence for adopting the 3(rd) robotic arm (RA) called the pulling RA rather than a uterine manipulator to manipulate the uterus in the robotic radical hysterectomy (RRH) for cervical cancer is still limited. We present a single-center retrospective experience comparing using the pulling RA to replace a uterine manipulator vs. using a uterine manipulator to manipulate the uterus in RRH. METHODS: 106 patients diagnosed with IA, IB1-IB2 and IIA1 cervical cancer were retrospectively included for intraoperative and postoperative parameters analysis. 50 patients received RRH by adopting the pulling RA instead of a uterine manipulator to pull the uterus (3-RA RRH group), and another 56 patients were performed RRH with a uterine manipulator (2-RA RRH group). RRH with the pulling RA consisted of a camera arm, 3 RAs including a pulling RA, and 2 conventional assistant arms (3-RA RRH group). In comparison, RRH with a uterine manipulator included 2 RAs and 2 conventional assistant arms (2-RA RRH group). Besides, 3-RA’ RRH group was selected from the 25(th)-50(th) cases in the 3-RA RRH group based on the learning curve and was compared with the 2-RA RRH group in terms of intraoperative and postoperative parameters. RESULTS: The patients’ early post-operative complication (≤7 days) (p=0.022) and post-operative anemia (p < 0.001) of the 3-RA RRH were significantly lower than that in the 2-RA RRH group. The results of comparing the 2-RA RRH group with the 3-RA’ RRH group were consistent with the aforementioned results, except for the operative time (220.4 vs. 197.4 minutes, p=0.022) and hospital stay (7.8 vs. 8.7 days, p=0.034). The median follow-up in the 3-RA RRH and 2-RA RRH groups was 29 and 50 months till March 2023. The 3-RA RRH and 2-RA RRH groups’ recurrence rates were 2% (1/50) and 5.4% (3/56), respectively. The mortality in the 3-RA RRH and 2-RA RRH groups was 2% (1/50) and 3.5% (2/56), respectively. CONCLUSION: Our study suggested that replacing the uterine manipulator via the 3(rd) RA is viable; the results showed comparable surgical outcomes between the two methods. Thus, 3-RA RRH could be considered a well-executed surgical option in well-selected patients. Frontiers Media S.A. 2023-07-06 /pmc/articles/PMC10358761/ /pubmed/37483489 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fonc.2023.1159081 Text en Copyright © 2023 Liang, He, Li, Chen, Zhao, Yang, Lin, Zeng, Wei, Yang and Fan https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Oncology
Liang, Xuzhi
He, Haijing
Li, Yingjin
Chen, Sibang
Zhao, Jinche
Yang, Bing
Lin, Huisi
Zeng, Hao
Wei, Liuyi
Yang, Jiahuang
Fan, Jiangtao
An optimized robotic surgical technique for cervical cancer: investigating whether the use of the pulling robotic arm has better surgical outcomes
title An optimized robotic surgical technique for cervical cancer: investigating whether the use of the pulling robotic arm has better surgical outcomes
title_full An optimized robotic surgical technique for cervical cancer: investigating whether the use of the pulling robotic arm has better surgical outcomes
title_fullStr An optimized robotic surgical technique for cervical cancer: investigating whether the use of the pulling robotic arm has better surgical outcomes
title_full_unstemmed An optimized robotic surgical technique for cervical cancer: investigating whether the use of the pulling robotic arm has better surgical outcomes
title_short An optimized robotic surgical technique for cervical cancer: investigating whether the use of the pulling robotic arm has better surgical outcomes
title_sort optimized robotic surgical technique for cervical cancer: investigating whether the use of the pulling robotic arm has better surgical outcomes
topic Oncology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10358761/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37483489
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fonc.2023.1159081
work_keys_str_mv AT liangxuzhi anoptimizedroboticsurgicaltechniqueforcervicalcancerinvestigatingwhethertheuseofthepullingroboticarmhasbettersurgicaloutcomes
AT hehaijing anoptimizedroboticsurgicaltechniqueforcervicalcancerinvestigatingwhethertheuseofthepullingroboticarmhasbettersurgicaloutcomes
AT liyingjin anoptimizedroboticsurgicaltechniqueforcervicalcancerinvestigatingwhethertheuseofthepullingroboticarmhasbettersurgicaloutcomes
AT chensibang anoptimizedroboticsurgicaltechniqueforcervicalcancerinvestigatingwhethertheuseofthepullingroboticarmhasbettersurgicaloutcomes
AT zhaojinche anoptimizedroboticsurgicaltechniqueforcervicalcancerinvestigatingwhethertheuseofthepullingroboticarmhasbettersurgicaloutcomes
AT yangbing anoptimizedroboticsurgicaltechniqueforcervicalcancerinvestigatingwhethertheuseofthepullingroboticarmhasbettersurgicaloutcomes
AT linhuisi anoptimizedroboticsurgicaltechniqueforcervicalcancerinvestigatingwhethertheuseofthepullingroboticarmhasbettersurgicaloutcomes
AT zenghao anoptimizedroboticsurgicaltechniqueforcervicalcancerinvestigatingwhethertheuseofthepullingroboticarmhasbettersurgicaloutcomes
AT weiliuyi anoptimizedroboticsurgicaltechniqueforcervicalcancerinvestigatingwhethertheuseofthepullingroboticarmhasbettersurgicaloutcomes
AT yangjiahuang anoptimizedroboticsurgicaltechniqueforcervicalcancerinvestigatingwhethertheuseofthepullingroboticarmhasbettersurgicaloutcomes
AT fanjiangtao anoptimizedroboticsurgicaltechniqueforcervicalcancerinvestigatingwhethertheuseofthepullingroboticarmhasbettersurgicaloutcomes
AT liangxuzhi optimizedroboticsurgicaltechniqueforcervicalcancerinvestigatingwhethertheuseofthepullingroboticarmhasbettersurgicaloutcomes
AT hehaijing optimizedroboticsurgicaltechniqueforcervicalcancerinvestigatingwhethertheuseofthepullingroboticarmhasbettersurgicaloutcomes
AT liyingjin optimizedroboticsurgicaltechniqueforcervicalcancerinvestigatingwhethertheuseofthepullingroboticarmhasbettersurgicaloutcomes
AT chensibang optimizedroboticsurgicaltechniqueforcervicalcancerinvestigatingwhethertheuseofthepullingroboticarmhasbettersurgicaloutcomes
AT zhaojinche optimizedroboticsurgicaltechniqueforcervicalcancerinvestigatingwhethertheuseofthepullingroboticarmhasbettersurgicaloutcomes
AT yangbing optimizedroboticsurgicaltechniqueforcervicalcancerinvestigatingwhethertheuseofthepullingroboticarmhasbettersurgicaloutcomes
AT linhuisi optimizedroboticsurgicaltechniqueforcervicalcancerinvestigatingwhethertheuseofthepullingroboticarmhasbettersurgicaloutcomes
AT zenghao optimizedroboticsurgicaltechniqueforcervicalcancerinvestigatingwhethertheuseofthepullingroboticarmhasbettersurgicaloutcomes
AT weiliuyi optimizedroboticsurgicaltechniqueforcervicalcancerinvestigatingwhethertheuseofthepullingroboticarmhasbettersurgicaloutcomes
AT yangjiahuang optimizedroboticsurgicaltechniqueforcervicalcancerinvestigatingwhethertheuseofthepullingroboticarmhasbettersurgicaloutcomes
AT fanjiangtao optimizedroboticsurgicaltechniqueforcervicalcancerinvestigatingwhethertheuseofthepullingroboticarmhasbettersurgicaloutcomes