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Robotic colorectal cancer surgery in China: a nationwide retrospective observational study.

Authors :
Xu, Jianmin
Tang, Bo
Li, Taiyuan
Jia, Baoqing
Yao, Hongliang
Zhao, Ren
Yuan, Weitang
Zhong, Ming
Chi, Pan
Zhou, Yanbing
Yang, Xiongfei
Cheng, Longwei
He, Yulong
Li, Yongxiang
Tong, Weidong
Sun, Xuejun
Jiang, Zhiwei
Wang, Kang
Li, Xiaorong
Wang, Xin
Source :
Surgical Endoscopy & Other Interventional Techniques. Dec2021, Vol. 35 Issue 12, p6591-6603. 13p.
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Background: Robotic colorectal cancer surgery is widely accepted and applied. However, there is still no objective and comprehensive assessment on the data of nationwide multicenter series. Method: A total of 28 medical centers in Mainland China participated in this nationwide retrospective observational study. From the first case performed in each center to the last until December 2017, patients with robotic resection for primary tumor and pathologically confirmed colorectal adenocarcinoma were consecutively enrolled. Clinical, pathological and follow-up data were collected and analyzed. Results: A total of 5389 eligible patients were finally enrolled in this study, composing 72.2% of the total robotic colorectal surgery volume of Mainland China in the same period. For resections of one bowel segment of primary tumor, the postoperative mortality rate was 0.08% (4/5063 cases), and the postoperative complication rate (Clavien–Dindo grade II or higher) was 8.6% (434/5063 cases). For multiple resections, the postoperative mortality rate was 0.6% (2/326 cases), and the postoperative complication rate was 16.3% (53/326 cases). Out of 2956 patients receiving sphincter-preserving surgery in only primary resection, 130 (4.4%) patients had anastomotic leakage. Traditional low anterior resection (tumor at middle rectum) (OR 2.384, P < 0.001), traditional low anterior resection (tumor at low rectum) (OR 1.968, P = 0.017) and intersphincteric resection (OR 5.468, P = 0.006) were significant independent risk factors for anastomotic leakage. Female gender (OR 0.557, P = 0.005), age ≥ 60 years (OR 0.684, P = 0.040), and preventive stoma (OR 0.496, P = 0.043) were significant independent protective factors. Body mass index, preoperative chemotherapy/radiotherapy, tumor size, and TNM stage did not independently affect the occurrence of anastomotic leakage. Conclusion: Robotic colorectal cancer surgery was safe and reliable and might have advantages in patients at high risk of anastomotic leakage. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
18666817
Volume :
35
Issue :
12
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Surgical Endoscopy & Other Interventional Techniques
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
153626210
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00464-020-08157-4