Abstract
Robotic surgery has been increasingly applied to Hirschsprung patients with encouraging results. We report the results of a 5year unicentric experience. All consecutive HSCR patients older than 12months who underwent a surgical procedure with robotic approach between September 2017 and August 2022 were prospectively included. We collected data regarding demographics, extent of aganglionosis, associated anomalies, indications to surgery, and a number of perioperative data such as surgical details, intraoperative and perioperative complications, length of surgery, length of hospital stay, and functional outcome. A total of 28 patients underwent 31 robotic procedures during the study period. Median age at surgery was 82months. Eleven primary Totally Robotic Soave Pull-Through, 12 redoes, 5 innervative mapping, 2 redundant rectal pouch excision, and 1 Miles' procedures have been performed. Median console time was 145min. No conversion to either laparoscopy nor to laparotomy was required. Median length of hospital stay was 6days. Two patients experienced complications requiring reiterative surgery. One patient experienced mild postoperative enterocolitis. Normal continence was achieved by 70% of patients after a median of 16months postoperatively (80% for primary pull-throughs, 55% for redoes). To conclude, robotic surgery for older HSCR patients proved to be feasible, safe, and effective. Patients with complex surgical requirements seem to benefit most from this promising approach. Provided the economic burden is addressed and solved, robotic surgery will represent an excellent alternative for the surgical treatment of HSCR patients.
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