Abstract

Textbook outcome is a composite quality measurement of short-term outcomes for evaluating complex surgical procedures. We compared textbook outcome and survival of robotic total gastrectomy (RTG) with those of laparoscopic total gastrectomy (LTG). We retrospectively reviewed 395 patients (RTG, n = 74; LTG, n = 321) who underwent curative total gastrectomy for gastric cancer via minimally invasive approaches from 2009 to 2018. We performed propensity score matched analysis to adjust for potential selection bias. Textbook outcome included a negative resection margin, no intraoperative complication, retrieved lymph nodes > 15, no severe complication, no reintervention, no unplanned intensive care unit admission, hospitalization ≤ 21 days, no readmission after discharge, and no postoperative mortality. Survival outcomes included 3-year overall and relapse-free survival rates. After matching, 74 patients in each group were selected. Textbook outcome was similar in the RTG and LTG groups (70.3% and 75.7%, respectively), although RTG required a longer operative time. The quality metric least often achieved was the presence of severe complications in both groups (77.0% in both groups). There were no differences in the 3-year overall survival rate (98.6% and 89.7%, respectively; log-rank P = 0.144) and relapse-free survival rate between the RTG and LTG groups (97.3% and 87.0%, respectively; log-rank P = 0.167). Textbook outcome and survival outcome of RTG were similar to those of LTG for gastric cancer.

Highlights

  • Textbook outcome is a composite quality measurement of short-term outcomes for evaluating complex surgical procedures

  • We reviewed the prospectively collected data of patients who underwent minimally invasive total gastrectomy for gastric cancer from January 2009 to December 2018 at the Department of Surgery, Ajou University School of Medicine

  • We performed propensity score matched analysis to adjust for potential selection bias, and short- and longterm outcomes were similar between the groups following successful matching

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Summary

Introduction

Textbook outcome is a composite quality measurement of short-term outcomes for evaluating complex surgical procedures. In 2017, the Dutch Upper Gastrointestinal Cancer Audit group developed a composite measure defined as textbook outcome that combined 10 outcome parameters to assess the quality of surgical care for gastric c­ ancer[6]. Robotic gastrectomy showed reliable surgical outcomes as an alternative for laparoscopic gastrectomy in minimally invasive surgery for the treatment of gastric c­ ancer[14,15,16,17,18,19]. These studies focused on singlequality indicators such as bleeding, retrieved lymph nodes, complications, and mortality to compare short-term outcomes. We aimed to compare the perioperative (based on textbook outcome) and survival outcomes between RTG and LTG for gastric cancer treatment

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