TY - JOUR
T1 - Robotic Distal Pancreatectomy
T2 - A Novel Standard of Care? Benchmark Values for Surgical Outcomes from 16 International Expert Centers
AU - Muller, Philip C.
AU - Breuer, Eva
AU - Nickel, Felix
AU - Zani, Sabino
AU - Kauffmann, Emanuele
AU - De Franco, Lorenzo
AU - Tschuor, Christoph
AU - Krohn, Paul Suno
AU - Burgdorf, Stefan K.
AU - Jonas, Jan Philipp
AU - Oberkofler, Christian E.
AU - Petrowsky, Henrik
AU - Saint-Marc, Olivier
AU - Seelen, Leonard
AU - Molenaar, Izaak Quintus
AU - Wellner, Ulrich
AU - Keck, Tobias
AU - Coratti, Andrea
AU - Van Dam, Jacob L.
AU - De Wilde, Roeland
AU - Koerkamp, Bas Groot
AU - Valle, Valentina
AU - Giulianotti, Pier
AU - Ghabi, Elie
AU - Moskal, David
AU - Lavu, Harish
AU - Vrochides, Dionisios
AU - Martinie, John
AU - Yeo, Charles
AU - Sanchez-Velazquez, Patricia
AU - Ielpo, Benedetto
AU - Ajay, Pranay S.
AU - Shah, Mihir M.
AU - Kooby, David A.
AU - Gao, Song
AU - Hao, Jihui
AU - He, Jin
AU - Boggi, Ugo
AU - Hackert, Thilo
AU - Allen, Peter
AU - Borel-Rinkes, Inne H.M.
AU - Clavien, Pierre Alain
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 Lippincott Williams and Wilkins. All rights reserved.
PY - 2023/8/1
Y1 - 2023/8/1
N2 - Background and Objective: Robotic distal pancreatectomy (DP) is an emerging attractive approach, but its role compared with laparoscopic or open surgery remains unclear. Benchmark values are novel and objective tools for such comparisons. The aim of this study was to identify benchmark cutoffs for many outcome parameters for DP with or without splenectomy beyond the learning curve. Methods: This study analyzed outcomes from international expert centers from patients undergoing robotic DP for malignant or benign lesions. After excluding the first 10 cases in each center to reduce the effect of the learning curve, consecutive patients were included from the start of robotic DP up to June 2020. Benchmark patients had no significant comorbidities. Benchmark cutoff values were derived from the 75th or the 25th percentile of the median values of all benchmark centers. Benchmark values were compared with a laparoscopic control group from 4 high-volume centers and published open DP landmark series. Results: Sixteen centers contributed 755 cases, whereof 345 benchmark patients (46%) were included the analysis. Benchmark cutoffs included: operation time ≤300 minutes, conversion rate ≤3%, clinically relevant postoperative pancreatic fistula ≤32%, 3 months major complication rate ≤26.7%, and lymph node retrieval ≥9. The comprehensive complication index at 3 months was ≤8.7 without deterioration thereafter. Compared with robotic DP, laparoscopy had significantly higher conversion rates (5×) and overall complications, while open DP was associated with more blood loss and longer hospital stay. Conclusion: This first benchmark study demonstrates that robotic DP provides superior postoperative outcomes compared with laparoscopic and open DP. Robotic DP may be expected to become the approach of choice in minimally invasive DP.
AB - Background and Objective: Robotic distal pancreatectomy (DP) is an emerging attractive approach, but its role compared with laparoscopic or open surgery remains unclear. Benchmark values are novel and objective tools for such comparisons. The aim of this study was to identify benchmark cutoffs for many outcome parameters for DP with or without splenectomy beyond the learning curve. Methods: This study analyzed outcomes from international expert centers from patients undergoing robotic DP for malignant or benign lesions. After excluding the first 10 cases in each center to reduce the effect of the learning curve, consecutive patients were included from the start of robotic DP up to June 2020. Benchmark patients had no significant comorbidities. Benchmark cutoff values were derived from the 75th or the 25th percentile of the median values of all benchmark centers. Benchmark values were compared with a laparoscopic control group from 4 high-volume centers and published open DP landmark series. Results: Sixteen centers contributed 755 cases, whereof 345 benchmark patients (46%) were included the analysis. Benchmark cutoffs included: operation time ≤300 minutes, conversion rate ≤3%, clinically relevant postoperative pancreatic fistula ≤32%, 3 months major complication rate ≤26.7%, and lymph node retrieval ≥9. The comprehensive complication index at 3 months was ≤8.7 without deterioration thereafter. Compared with robotic DP, laparoscopy had significantly higher conversion rates (5×) and overall complications, while open DP was associated with more blood loss and longer hospital stay. Conclusion: This first benchmark study demonstrates that robotic DP provides superior postoperative outcomes compared with laparoscopic and open DP. Robotic DP may be expected to become the approach of choice in minimally invasive DP.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85141945296&partnerID=8YFLogxK
UR - https://www.mendeley.com/catalogue/fa82e210-bd9d-30fe-9674-c90546c56337/
U2 - 10.1097/SLA.0000000000005601
DO - 10.1097/SLA.0000000000005601
M3 - Journal articles
C2 - 35861061
AN - SCOPUS:85141945296
SN - 0003-4932
VL - 278
SP - 253
EP - 259
JO - Annals of Surgery
JF - Annals of Surgery
IS - 2
ER -