Abstract

The complexity associated with laparoscopic colorectal surgery requires several skills to overcome the technical difficulties related to this procedure. To overcome the technical challenges of laparoscopic surgery, a robotic approach has been introduced. Our study reports the surgical outcomes obtained by the transition from laparoscopic to robotic approach in colorectal cancer surgery to establish in which type of approach the proficiency is easier to reach. Data about the first consecutive 15 laparoscopic and the first 15 consecutive robotic cases are extracted, adopting as a comparator of proficiency the last 15 laparoscopic colorectal resections for cancer. The variables studied are operative time, number of harvested nodes, conversion rate, postoperative complications, recovery outcomes. Our analysis includes 15 patients per group. Our results show that operative time is significantly longer in the first 15 laparoscopic cases (p = 0.001). A significantly lower number of harvested nodes was retrieved in the first 15 laparoscopic cases (p = 0.003). Clavien Dindo I complication rate was higher in the first laparoscopic group, but without a significant difference among the three groups (p = 0.09). Our results show that the surgeon needed no apparent learning curve to reach their laparoscopic standards. However, further multicentric prospective studies are needed to confirm this conclusion.

Highlights

  • Invasive surgery represents nowadays the standard approach for the treatment of colorectal pathologies [1,2,3]

  • The complexity associated with laparoscopic colorectal surgery requires several skills to overcome the technical difficulties related to this type of procedure [4,5]

  • Its adoption to colorectal surgery has gained large consensus among the surgeons, because of its several facilities to overcome the difficulties of laparoscopic surgery

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Summary

Introduction

Invasive surgery represents nowadays the standard approach for the treatment of colorectal pathologies [1,2,3]. The complexity associated with laparoscopic colorectal surgery requires several skills to overcome the technical difficulties related to this type of procedure [4,5]. The safety and the feasibility of laparoscopic colorectal surgery are related to the surgeon’s experience. In this setting, several parameters have been investigated to define an adequate level of proficiency, but the number of cases needed to complete the learning curve is still not well defined [6,7,8,9,10,11], varying between 11 and 152 [6,9,11,12]. Its adoption to colorectal surgery has gained large consensus among the surgeons, because of its several facilities to overcome the difficulties of laparoscopic surgery

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