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Readmission and complications after robotic surgery: experience of 10,000 operations at a comprehensive cancer center

Authors :
Pooya, Banapour
Bertram, Yuh
Avinash, Chenam
Jim K, Shen
Nora, Ruel
Ernest S, Han
Jae Y, Kim
Ellie G, Maghami
Alessio, Pigazzi
Dan J, Raz
Gagandeep P, Singh
Mark, Wakabayashi
Yanghee, Woo
Yuman, Fong
Clayton S, Lau
Source :
Journal of robotic surgery. 15(1)
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Evaluation of safety is of paramount importance with adoption of novel surgical technology. Although robotic surgery has become widely used in oncologic surgery, analysis of safety is lacking in comparison to traditional techniques. Standardized assessment of robotic surgical outcomes and adverse events following oncologic surgery is necessary for quality improvement with innovative technology. Between 2003 and 2016, 10,013 unique robotic operations were performed in 9,858 patients. Our prospectively maintained database was retrospectively reviewed for hospital readmissions and Clavien-Dindo grade ≥ 2 complications within 30 days. Multivariable logistic regression was used to identify predictors of surgical complications and hospital readmissions. Cases were stratified by discipline: genitourinary (n = 8240), gynecologic (n = 857), thoracic (n = 457), gastrointestinal (n = 322), hepatobiliary (n = 60), ear/nose/throat (n = 44) and general (n = 33). Intraoperative complications occurred in 42 surgeries (0.4%). Postoperative complications occurred in 946 patients [9.4%, highest grade 2 (n = 574), 3 (n = 288), 4 (n = 72), 5 (n = 10)]. Most frequent complications were ileus (154, 16.3%), anemia (91, 9.6%), cardiac arrhythmia (62, 6.6%), deep vein thrombosis/pulmonary embolus (47, 5.0%), wound infection (45, 4.8%) and urinary leak (43, 4.5%). 405 patients (4.0%) required readmission. Most common causes for hospital readmission were ileus (44, 10.9%), urinary leak (23, 5.7%), urinary tract infection (23, 5.7%), intra-abdominal abscess/fluid collection (23, 5.7%), and small bowel obstruction (19, 4.7%). On multivariable analysis, longer operative time and older age predicted complications and readmissions (p ≤ 0.02). Robotic-assisted surgery appears a safe for oncologic surgery with acceptable hospital readmission and complication rates. Older age and longer operative time were associated with complications and readmission.

Details

ISSN :
18632491
Volume :
15
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of robotic surgery
Accession number :
edsair.pmid..........da514e8af40e3cd3b9bc3466b0f94c56