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The Italian National Registry for minimally invasive pancreatic surgery: an initiative of the Italian Group of Minimally Invasive Pancreas Surgery (IGoMIPS)

Authors :
Bruno Nardo
Mario Testini
Alessandro Zerbi
Ugo Boggi
Niccolò Napoli
Giuseppe Maria Ettorre
Massimo Falconi
Roberto Coppola
Elio Jovine
Giovanni Butturini
Andrea Valeri
Pietro Maida
Paolo De Paolis
Giovanni Conzo
Raffaele Dalla Valle
Giulio Belli
S. Berti
Carlo Molino
Andrea Coratti
Francesco Minni
Giovanni Ferrari
Giovanni Capretti
Sergio Alfieri
Alessandro Ferrero
Roberto Salvia
Gianluca Garulli
Zerbi, A.
Capretti, G.
Napoli, N.
Belli, G.
Coppola, R.
Falconi, M.
Salvia, R.
Valeri, A.
Alfieri, S.
Berti, S.
Butturini, G.
Conzo, G.
Coratti, A.
Dalla Valle, R.
Garulli, G.
Ettorre, G. M.
Ferrari, G.
Ferrero, A.
Jovine, E.
Maida, P.
Minni, F.
Molino, C.
Nardo, B.
De Paolis, P.
Testini, M.
Boggi, U.
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

The value of minimally invasive pancreatic surgery (MIPS) is still uncertain, despite the growing number of publications, including reviews and meta-analyses, and the quick diffusion of these procedures worldwide. The Italian Group of Minimally Invasive Pancreas Surgery (IGoMIPS) was created under the auspices of three Scientific Societies: Associazione Italiana Studio Pancreas (AISP), Associazione Italiana Chirurgia Epato-Bilio-Pancreatica (AICEP, former IT-IHPBA), and Società Italiana di Chirurgia Endoscopica (SICE). The main aim of IGoMIPS is to develop and implement a national registry for MIPS. IGoMIPS was founded on February 22, 2019 in Pisa. The IGoMIPS registry became operational in September 2019, following approval by the Ethic Committees of founding Institutions, inscription into the Registry of Patient Registries (RoPR), and a wrap-up meeting held in Bologna during the Annual Congress of the Italian Surgical Society. During this meeting IGoMIPS members approved that the Italian Registry will provide data to the European Registry, while retaining the right to analyze and publish Italian data. An audience survey was also conducted to obtain information on perceived value and current implementation of MIPS in founding Institutions. MIPS is performed in 94.7% of IGoMIPS centers, including pancreaticoduodenectomy in 42.1%. Robotic assistance was employed in 52.6% of Institutions. The annual volume of MIPS was 6–10 cases in 38.9% of the centers, 11–20 cases in 16.7%, 21–30 cases in 22.2%, and > 30 cases in 22.2%. The registry was felt to be extremely important for both safety improvement and educational purposes by 94.5% of the centers.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....4d90aed19e5957b3d83c9c2a507e978d