A systematic review of robot-assisted anti-reflux surgery to examine reporting standards

Author:

Huttman Marc M.,Robertson Harry F.,Smith Alexander N.,Biggs Sarah E.,Dewi Ffion,Dixon Lauren K.,Kirkham Emily N.,Jones Conor S.,Ramirez Jozel,Scroggie Darren L.,Zucker Benjamin E.,Pathak Samir,Blencowe Natalie S.,Main Barry G.,Blazeby Jane M.,Zucker Ben,Dawson Sarah,Vallance Abi,Wilkinson Aimee,Young Amber,Jones Annabel,Abbas Aya,Turner Benedict,Thomas Charlie,Hoffmann Christin,Henshall David,Boden Eleanor,Gull Emma,Sewart Emma,Wood Fergus,Loro Francesca,Hollowood Freya,Fowler George E.,Higginbotham George,Sellers Grace,Hughes Ioan,Handa Ishita,Rees Jonathan,Leandro Lorna,Paynter Louisa,Huppler Lucy,Gourbault Lysander,Wijeyaratne Manuk,Dewhurst Max,Shah Max,Kiandee Miraen,Dada Mo,Brewster Oliver,Lok Pat,Winayak Rahul,Ranat Reesha,Macefield Rhiannon,Lawrence Ruby,Millar Ryan,Lawday Sam,Dalmia Sanjush,Cousins Sian,Rozwadowski Sophie,Robinson Tanya,Perra Teresa,Leow Tjun Wei,Brankin-Frisby Tom,Baker Will,Hurst William,Young Ysabelle Embury,Hoffman Christin,Richards Hollie S.,Olivier James,Lee Keng Siang,Purves Rory,

Abstract

AbstractRobot-assisted anti-reflux surgery (RA-ARS) is increasingly being used to treat refractory gastro-oesophageal reflux disease. The IDEAL (Idea, Development, Exploration, Assessment, Long-term follow up) Collaboration’s framework aims to improve the evaluation of surgical innovation, but the extent to which the evolution of RA-ARS has followed this model is unclear. This study aims to evaluate the standard to which RA-ARS has been reported during its evolution, in relation to the IDEAL framework. A systematic review from inception to June 2020 was undertaken to identify all primary English language studies pertaining to RA-ARS. Studies of paraoesophageal or giant hernias were excluded. Data extraction was informed by IDEAL guidelines and summarised by narrative synthesis. Twenty-three studies were included: two case reports, five case series, ten cohort studies and six randomised controlled trials. The majority were single-centre studies comparing RA-ARS and laparoscopic Nissen fundoplication. Eleven (48%) studies reported patient selection criteria, with high variability between studies. Few studies reported conflicts of interest (30%), funding arrangements (26%), or surgeons’ prior robotic experience (13%). Outcome reporting was heterogeneous; 157 distinct outcomes were identified. No single outcome was reported in all studies.The under-reporting of important aspects of study design and high degree of outcome heterogeneity impedes the ability to draw meaningful conclusions from the body of evidence. There is a need for further well-designed prospective studies and randomised trials, alongside agreement about outcome selection, measurement and reporting for future RA-ARS studies.

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Health Informatics,Surgery

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