Litcius/Paper detail

Impact of Robotic Assistance on Complications in Bariatric Surgery at Expert Laparoscopic Surgery Centers

Robert Caïazzo, Pierre Bauvin, Camille Marciniak, Patrick Saux, Geoffrey Jacqmin, R Arnoux, S. Benchetrit, J. Dargent, Jean‐Marc Chevallier, Vincent Fréring, Jean Gugenheim, D. Lechaux, Simon Msika, A. Sterkers, Philippe Topart, Grégory Baud, François Pattou, For the SOFFCO-mm Study Group

2023Annals of Surgery13 citationsDOI

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To investigate the way robotic assistance affected rate of complications in bariatric surgery at expert robotic and laparoscopic surgery facilities. BACKGROUND: While the benefits of robotic assistance were established at the beginning of surgical training, there is limited data on the robot's influence on experienced bariatric laparoscopic surgeons. METHODS: We conducted a retrospective study using the BRO clinical database (2008-2022) collecting data of patients operated on in expert centers. We compared the serious complication rate (defined as a Clavien score≥3) in patients undergoing metabolic bariatric surgery with or without robotic assistance. We used a directed acyclic graph to identify the variables adjustment set used in a multivariable linear regression, and a propensity score matching to calculate the average treatment effect (ATE) of robotic assistance. RESULTS: The study included 35,043 patients [24,428 sleeve gastrectomy (SG); 10,452 Roux-en-Y gastric bypass (RYGB); 163 single anastomosis duodenal-ileal bypass with sleeve gastrectomy (SADI-S)], with 938 operated on with robotic assistance (801 SG; 134 RYGB; 3 SADI-S), among 142 centers. Overall, we found no benefit of robotic assistance regarding the risk of complications (average treatment effect=-0.05, P =0.794), with no difference in the RYGB+SADI group ( P =0.322) but a negative trend in the SG group (more complications, P =0.060). Length of hospital stay was decreased in the robot group (3.7±11.1 vs 4.0±9.0 days, P <0.001). CONCLUSIONS: Robotic assistance reduced the length of stay but did not statistically significantly reduce postoperative complications (Clavien score≥3) following either GBP or SG. A tendency toward an elevated risk of complications following SG requires more supporting studies.

Topics & Concepts

MedicinePropensity score matchingRetrospective cohort studyRobotic surgerySurgeryLaparoscopyComplicationBariatric Surgery and OutcomesMinimally Invasive Surgical TechniquesCardiac and Coronary Surgery Techniques