Litcius/Paper detail

Minimally invasive pancreatic surgery—will robotic surgery be the future?

Luca Dittrich, Matthias Biebl, Thomas Malinka, M. Knoop, Johann Pratschke

2021European surgery. Supplement/European surgery31 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Summary Due to the complexity of the procedures and the texture of the organ itself, pancreatic surgery remains a challenge in the field of visceral surgery. During the past decade, a minimally invasive approach to pancreatic surgery has gained distribution in clinical routine, extending from left-sided procedures to pancreatic head resections. While a laparoscopic approach has proven beneficial for many patients with left-sided pancreatic pathologies, the complex reconstruction in pancreas head resections remains worrisome with the laparoscopic approach. The robotic technique was established to overcome such technical constraints while preserving the advantages of the laparoscopic approach. Even though robotic systems are still in development, especially in pancreatoduodenectomy, the current literature demonstrates the feasibility of this approach and stable clinical and oncological outcomes compared to the open technique, albeit only under the condition of such operations being performed by specialist teams in a high-volume setting (>20 robotic pancreaticoduodenectomies per year). The aim of this review is to analyze the current evidence regarding a minimally invasive approach to pancreatic surgery and to review the potential of a robotic approach. Presently, there is still a scarcity of sound evidence and long-term oncological data regarding the role of minimally invasive and robotic pancreatic surgery in the literature, especially in the setting of pancreaticoduodenectomy.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineInvasive surgeryRobotic surgeryPancreaticoduodenectomyPancreatic headPancreasGeneral surgerySurgeryLaparoscopic surgeryLaparoscopyInternal medicinePancreatic and Hepatic Oncology ResearchColorectal Cancer Surgical TreatmentsRenal cell carcinoma treatment