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Review
. 2019 Sep;22(5):909-919.
doi: 10.1007/s10120-019-00979-z. Epub 2019 Jul 4.

Robotic-assisted gastrectomy for gastric cancer: a European perspective

Affiliations
Review

Robotic-assisted gastrectomy for gastric cancer: a European perspective

Gijsbert I van Boxel et al. Gastric Cancer. 2019 Sep.

Abstract

Gastrectomy is the mainstay treatment for gastric cancer. To reduce the associated patient burden, minimally invasive gastrectomy was introduced in almost 30 years ago. The increase in the availability of surgical robotic systems led to the first robotic-assisted gastrectomy to be performed in 2002 in Japan. Robotic gastrectomy however, particularly in Europe, has not yet gained significant traction. Most reports to date are from Asia, predominantly containing observational studies. These cohorts are commonly different in the tumour stage, location (particularly with regards to gastroesophageal junctional tumours) and patient BMI compared to those encountered in Europe. To date, no randomised clinical trials have been performed comparing robotic gastrectomy to either laparoscopic or open equivalent. Cohort studies show that robotic gastrectomy is equal oncological outcomes in terms of survival and lymph node yield. Operative times in the robotic group are consistently longer compared to laparoscopic or open gastrectomy, although evidence is emerging that resectional surgical time is equal. The only reproducibly significant difference in favour of robot-assisted gastrectomy is a reduction in intra-operative blood loss and some studies show a reduction in the risk of pancreatic fistula formation.

Keywords: Gastric cancer; Outcomes; RAG; Robotic-assisted gastrectomy.

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Conflict of interest statement

JR and RvH both proctor for Intuitive Surgery.

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