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Comparative Study
. 2024 Jul 1;280(1):108-117.
doi: 10.1097/SLA.0000000000006267. Epub 2024 Mar 14.

Robotic Versus Laparoscopic Liver Resection in Various Settings: An International Multicenter Propensity Score Matched Study of 10.075 Patients

Jasper P Sijberden  1   2   3 Tijs J Hoogteijling  1   2   3 Davit Aghayan  4   5 Francesca Ratti  6   7 Ek-Khoon Tan  8 Victoria Morrison-Jones  9 Jacopo Lanari  10 Louis Haentjens  11 Kongyuan Wei  12 Stylianos Tzedakis  13 John Martinie  14 Daniel Osei Bordom  15 Giuseppe Zimmitti  1 Kaitlyn Crespo  16 Paolo Magistri  17 Nadia Russolillo  18 Simone Conci  19 Burak Görgec  2   3 Andrea Benedetti Cacciaguerra  20 Daniel D'Souza  21 Gabriel Zozaya  22 Cèlia Caula  23 David Geller  24 Ricardo Robles Campos  25 Roland Croner  26 Shafiq Rehman  27 Elio Jovine  28 Mikhail Efanov  29 Adnan Alseidi  30   31 Riccardo Memeo  32 Ibrahim Dagher  33 Felice Giuliante  34 Ernesto Sparrelid  35 Jawad Ahmad  36 Tom Gallagher  37 Moritz Schmelzle  38 Rutger-Jan Swijnenburg  2   3 Åsmund Avdem Fretland  4 Federica Cipriani  6   7 Ye-Xin Koh  8 Steven White  26 Santi Lopez Ben  23 Fernando Rotellar  22 Pablo E Serrano  21 Marco Vivarelli  20 Andrea Ruzzenente  19 Alessandro Ferrero  18 Fabrizio Di Benedetto  17 Marc G Besselink  2   3 Iswanto Sucandy  16 Robert P Sutcliffe  15 Dionisios Vrochides  39 David Fuks  13 Rong Liu  12 Mathieu D'Hondt  11 Umberto Cillo  10 John N Primrose  9 Brian K P Goh  8   40 Luca A Aldrighetti  6   7 Bjørn Edwin  4 Mohammad Abu Hilal  1   9 International consortium on Minimally Invasive Liver Surgery (I-MILS)
Affiliations
Comparative Study

Robotic Versus Laparoscopic Liver Resection in Various Settings: An International Multicenter Propensity Score Matched Study of 10.075 Patients

Jasper P Sijberden et al. Ann Surg. .

Abstract

Objective: To compare the perioperative outcomes of robotic liver surgery (RLS) and laparoscopic liver surgery (LLS) in various settings.

Background: Clear advantages of RLS over LLS have rarely been demonstrated, and the associated costs of robotic surgery are generally higher than those of laparoscopic surgery. Therefore, the exact role of the robotic approach in minimally invasive liver surgery remains to be defined.

Methods: In this international retrospective cohort study, the outcomes of patients who underwent RLS and LLS for all indications between 2009 and 2021 in 34 hepatobiliary referral centers were compared. Subgroup analyses were performed to compare both approaches across several types of procedures: (1) minor resections in the anterolateral (2, 3, 4b, 5, and 6) or (2) posterosuperior segments (1, 4a, 7, 8), and (3) major resections (≥3 contiguous segments). Propensity score matching was used to mitigate the influence of selection bias. The primary outcome was textbook outcome in liver surgery (TOLS), previously defined as the absence of intraoperative incidents ≥grade 2, postoperative bile leak ≥grade B, severe morbidity, readmission, and 90-day or in-hospital mortality with the presence of an R0 resection margin in case of malignancy. The absence of a prolonged length of stay was added to define TOLS+.

Results: Among the 10.075 included patients, 1.507 underwent RLS and 8.568 LLS. After propensity score matching, both groups constituted 1.505 patients. RLS was associated with higher rates of TOLS (78.3% vs 71.8%, P < 0.001) and TOLS+ (55% vs 50.4%, P = 0.026), less Pringle usage (39.1% vs 47.1%, P < 0.001), blood loss (100 vs 200 milliliters, P < 0.001), transfusions (4.9% vs 7.9%, P = 0.003), conversions (2.7% vs 8.8%, P < 0.001), overall morbidity (19.3% vs 25.7%, P < 0.001), and microscopically irradical resection margins (10.1% vs. 13.8%, P = 0.015), and shorter operative times (190 vs 210 minutes, P = 0.015). In the subgroups, RLS tended to have higher TOLS rates, compared with LLS, for minor resections in the posterosuperior segments (n = 431 per group, 75.9% vs 71.2%, P = 0.184) and major resections (n = 321 per group, 72.9% vs 67.5%, P = 0.086), although these differences did not reach statistical significance.

Conclusions: While both produce excellent outcomes, RLS might facilitate slightly higher TOLS rates than LLS.

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Conflict of interest statement

M.A.H. and M.G.B. received grants from Medtronic GmbH, Intuitive Surgical Inc., and Johnson & Johnson Medical GmbH for investigator-initiated studies. S.L.B. reported received fees from Baxter, Olympus, and Johnson & Johnson. M.S. reported received fees from Merck Serono GmbH, Bayer AG, ERBE Elektromedizin GmbH, Amgen Inc., AstraZeneca, Avateramedical GmbH, Johnson & Johnson Medical GmbH, TakedaPharmaceutical Limited, Olympus K.K., Medtronic GmbH, Intuitive Surgical Inc., Corzamedical, Baxter Int Inc. A.A.F. reported speaker’s honoraria from Bayer and Olympus. F.R. reported speakers' honoraria from Olympus. The remaining authors report no conflicts of interest.

Figures

FIGURE 1
FIGURE 1
Study flowchart. AL, indicate anterolateral; ALPPS, associating liver partition and portal vein ligation for staged hepatectomy; PS, posterosuperior; PVE, portal vein embolization; PVL, portal vein ligation.

Comment in

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