The Star Malaysia - Star2

Move over, Mr Surgeon ...

Dr Robot scrubs in, and suturing may never be the same.

- By MELISSA HEALY

SURGERY, a profession filled with great hands, quick minds and big egos, may have a new star in its midst.

The Smart Tissue Autonomous Robot – STAR – is a melding of offthe- shelf robotic hardware, timeworn sensor technology and improvised software, and it has none of the attributes that make surgeons the hard- charging stars of their profession.

But a new study suggests it could become the workhorse of the operating room ( OR) anyway, nudging aside some human surgeons well before the patient’s incision is closed.

In a series of trial runs, the new robotic system sutured incisions with deft, even strokes that surpassed those of experience­d surgeons and an existing robotic system.

Without any human oversight, the STAR system manipulate­d tissue that can stretch, twist and retract unpredicta­bly, and sewed it up well enough to withstand a surge of hydraulic pressure from within.

And by all accounts, it never complained about its hours or pay.

In fact, said the authors of a new study, the STAR system has the potential to speed some of surgery’s most time- consuming work, doing it with fewer mistakes and potentiall­y reducing costly and dangerous surgical complicati­ons.

It could not only make surgery safer, but reduce its cost, said the developers of surgery’s newest trainee.

To be sure, that is a claim that has been made for existing robotic surgical systems, which can cost more than US$ 1mil ( RM4mil) to purchase and US$ 100,000 ( RM400,000) to maintain.

But while not all have lived up to such promises, none have been designed to work so independen­tly of surgeons before.

When it comes to the labourious task of suturing together the sliced ends of the small intestine – a task akin to stitching together two slippery ends of a garden hose submerged in muddy water – “it does it consistent­ly, it does it perfectly all the time, regardless of where you are”, said the study’s lead author Dr Peter Kim, associate surgeon- inchief at Children’s National Health System in Washington, US.

In a report published a few days ago in the journal Science Translatio­nal Medicine, researcher­s at Johns Hopkins University acknowledg­ed that in these early trials, which used pigs’ intestines, the STAR system performed its task more slowly than an experience­d surgeon typically would.

But in practice, they said, that will change.

“We can run the robot really, really fast,” said study co- author Ryan Decker, a senior engineer in the Children’s National Health System’s Shiekh Zayed Institute for Pediatric Surgical Interventi­on. “But in this study, we really focused on ... the outcomes, so we didn’t run it as fast as we could.”

The developers of the STAR system said it could be ready for use in ORs in two to three years if they can find commercial partners capable of shepherdin­g the technology through the Food and Drug Administra­tion ( FDA) and onto the surgical market.

That path would be eased, they said, by the fact that some version of virtually all the system’s component technologi­es are already in broad medical use, and have therefore come before the FDA before.

The use of robotics as an aid to surgeons got its start in 1985, when a robot called the Puma 560 was used to sink a needle into a brain to perform a biopsy.

Despite concerns about the high cost of robotic surgical aids and their uneven record of improving patients’ outcomes, their use has exploded in recent years.

Robotic surgical systems such as the da Vinci are now widely used to perform colorectal, abdominal and gynaecolog­ical surgeries and to remove cancerous prostate glands.

In a key respect, though, the STAR system represents a significan­t step beyond existing surgical robots.

“In current robotic surgery, it’s basically still a surgeon doing an operation: He’s just using what we call a robot,” said Dr Jason D. Wright, chief of gynaecolog­ic oncology at Columbia University’s College of Physicians and Surgeons.

Under a surgeon’s direct gaze, and often mimicking the movement of a surgeon’s hands, current robotic surgical systems perform a range of surgical tasks.

“It’s like a surgical assistant,” said Wright, who was not involved with the newly published research.

By contrast, said Wright, “this is actually an autonomous­ly functionin­g robotic surgery ... that’s quite a different system.”

As described by the paper’s authors, “inspired by the best human surgical practices, a computer programme generates a plan to complete complex surgical tasks on deformable soft tissue”.

Then – given a surgeon’s go- ahead – the STAR system carries out that plan using an autonomous suturing algorithm and sensors that include night- vision and infrared sensing technology.

“The mode we’re operating under is supervised autonomy,” said co- author Axel Krieger of Hopkins’ paediatric surgical innovation programme. “The surgeon is overseeing and has the opportunit­y at any time to stop the robot and take over.”

At a moment when tissue is being pierced or a delicate transition is imminent, he said, “I’m sure they wouldn’t be comfortabl­e going off and taking a coffee break.”

But for painstakin­g and errorprone processes such as suturing long stretches or hard- to- reach recesses, the limits of human patience and dexterity have probably already been reached, said Krieger. “You can imagine that machines will do better,” he said.

Columbia surgeon Jason Wright called the STAR system “probably the evolution of surgery”, and predicted that in some areas, it will be embraced by surgeons.

“This is a very new technology, but a relatively straightfo­rward applicatio­n,” said Wright. “It’s certainly very exciting and warrants pursuing,” he added.

Is he ready to hear, “Dr Star, please close” in the OR?

“It’ll take some getting used to,” Wright laughed. “But if it’s better for the patient,” he added, “I’ll try.” – Los Angeles Times/ Tribune News Service

 ??  ?? In a series of trial runs, the smart Tissue Autonomous robot ( sTAr) sutured incisions, manipulate­d tissue and sewed it up well enough to withstand hydraulic pressure from within. — TNs
In a series of trial runs, the smart Tissue Autonomous robot ( sTAr) sutured incisions, manipulate­d tissue and sewed it up well enough to withstand hydraulic pressure from within. — TNs

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