Robotic Versus Laparoscopic Ventral Hernia Repair

Author:

Dhanani Naila H.1,Lyons Nicole B.2ORCID,Olavarria Oscar A.1,Bernardi Karla1,Holihan Julie L.1,Shah Shinil K.1,Wilson Todd D.1,Loor Michele M.3,Kao Lillian S.1,Liang Mike K.4

Affiliation:

1. Department of Surgery, McGovern Medical School at UTHealth, Houston, TX

2. Dewitt Daughtry Family Department of Surgery, University of Miami Leonard M. Miller School of Medicine, Miami, FL

3. Michael E. DeBakey Department of Surgery, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, TX

4. Department of Surgery, University of Houston, HCA Kingwood, Kingwood, TX

Abstract

Objective: Report the 2-year outcomes of a multicenter randomized controlled trial comparing robotic versus laparoscopic intraperitoneal onlay mesh ventral hernia repair. Background: Ventral hernia repair is one of the most common operations performed by general surgeons. To our knowledge, no studies have been published to date comparing long-term outcomes of laparoscopic versus robotic ventral hernia repair. Methods: The trial was registered at clinicaltrials.gov (NCT03490266). Clinical outcomes included surgical site infection, surgical site occurrence, hernia occurrence, readmission, reoperation, and mortality. Results: A total of 175 consecutive patients were approached that were deemed eligible for elective minimally invasive ventral hernia repair. In all, 124 were randomized and 101 completed follow-up at 2 years. Two-year follow-up was completed in 54 patients (83%) in the robotic arm and 47 patients (80%) in the laparoscopic arm. No differences were seen in surgical site infection or surgical site occurrence. Hernia recurrence occurred in 2 patients (4%) receiving robotic repair versus in 6 patients (13%) receiving laparoscopic repair (relative risk: 0.3, 95% CI: 0.06–1.39; P=0.12). No patients (0%) required reoperation in the robotic arm whereas 5 patients (11%) underwent reoperation in the laparoscopic arm (P=0.019, relative risk not calculatable due to null outcome). Conclusions: Robotic ventral hernia repair demonstrated at least similar if not improved outcomes at 2 years compared with laparoscopy. There is potential benefit with robotic repair; however, additional multi-center trials and longer follow-up are needed to validate the hypothesis-generating findings of this study.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Surgery

Reference19 articles.

1. Trends in the adoption of robotic surgery for common surgical procedures;Sheetz;JAMA Netw Open,2020

2. Epidemiology and cost of ventral hernia repair: making the case for hernia research;Poulose;Hernia,2012

3. Robotic versus laparoscopic ventral hernia repair: one-year results from a prospective, multicenter, blinded randomized controlled trial;Dhanani;Ann Surg,2021

4. Robotic versus laparoscopic ventral hernia repair: multicenter, blinded randomized controlled trial;Olavarria;BMJ,2020

5. Patient-reported outcomes of robotic vs laparoscopic ventral hernia repair with intraperitoneal mesh: the PROVE-IT Randomized Clinical Trial;Petro;JAMA Surg,2021

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