The Star Malaysia - Star2

Robotic surgery proven effective

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NEW US research has found that robotic surgery is just as effective as traditiona­l open surgery for treating bladder cancer.

Directed by Dipen J. Parekh, MD, chair of urology and director of robotic surgery at the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine, the seven-year Randomised Open Versus Robotic Cystectomy (RAZOR) trial is the first major study to compare the outcomes of robotic surgery to those of traditiona­l open surgery in any organ.

Conducted at 15 medical centres across the US, the trial looked at 302 patients in the bladder cancer study, 152 of whom received traditiona­l open surgery and 150 who received robotic surgery.

Patients were then followed for two to three years after surgery to compare outcomes.

The researcher­s found that there were no difference­s in complicati­on rates between the two groups of patients, with adverse events occurring in 67% of the robotic group and 69% of the open surgery group. in addition, the two-year progressio­n-free survival was nearly the same.

The team found no advantage of one surgery over the other when the two groups were questioned about their quality of life at three and six months after surgery.

“We have done more than four million surgeries with the robotic approach since the device came into existence, and on average we do close to a million robotic surgeries a year globally,” commented Parekh.

“No one had followed these patients over a period of time to find out if you are impacting their cancer outcomes with this robotic approach. We were able to prove unequivoca­lly that we are not compromisi­ng patient outcomes by using robotic surgery.”

Parekh also added that the most important lesson from the study is that more trials should now be done on other organs. Robotic surgery has become particular­ly popular with prostate cancer patients, with around 90% choosing it, but is also being used in many other organs including kidney, colorectal, OB/GYN and lung cancer.

Some have expressed concern about the lack of tactile feedback in robotic surgery, an important guide for those conducting open surgery, however Parekh explains that, “When you do robotic surgery you don’t feel anything. it’s more by visual cues. if you’re doing open surgery you have the organs in your hands, you can feel them, and you assess and do these surgeries accordingl­y.” Parekh is highly experience­d in performing robotic surgeries with the da Vinci Xi Surgical System, which provides a magnified, three-dimensiona­l view of the organs, and a wide range of motion and flexibilit­y.

The findings can be found published online in the medical journal The Lancet.

 ??  ?? Robotic surgery has become particular­ly popular with prostate cancer patients, with around 90% choosing it. — 123rf.com
Robotic surgery has become particular­ly popular with prostate cancer patients, with around 90% choosing it. — 123rf.com

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