Comparison of safety and effectiveness between robotic and laparoscopic major hepatectomy: a systematic review and meta-analysis

Author:

Mao Benliang12,Zhu Shanfei1,Li Dan3,Xiao Junhao12,Wang Bailin12,Yan Yong1

Affiliation:

1. General Surgery

2. College of Clinical Medicine, Guizhou Medical University, Guiyang, China

3. Thoracic Surgery, Guangzhou Red Cross Hospital, Jinan University, Guangzhou

Abstract

Background: Robotic platform has been increasingly applied in major hepatectomy. However, the role or advantage of robotic approach comparing with laparoscopic approach in major hepatectomy remains controversial. This meta-analysis compares perioperative outcomes of robotic major hepatectomy (RMH) to laparoscopic major hepatectomy (LMH) for hepatic neoplasms. Methods: PubMed, Web of Science, EMBASE, and Cochrane Library were searched to identify comparative studies compared RMH versus LMH for hepatic neoplasms. The search timeframe was set before May 2023. Main outcomes were mortality, overall morbidities, serious complications, and conversion to open surgery. Secondary outcomes were operative time, intraoperative blood loss, blood transfusion, postoperative length of hospital stay, R0 resection, reoperation, and readmission. Studies were evaluated for quality by Cochrane risk of bias tool or Newcastle-Ottawa scale. Data were pooled as odds ratio (OR) or mean difference (MD). This study was registered at PROSPERO (CRD42023410951). Results: Twelve retrospective cohort studies concerning total 1657 patients (796 RMH, 861 LMH) were included. Meta-analyses showed no significant differences in mortality (OR=1.23, 95% CI=0.50–2.98, P=0.65), overall postoperative complications (OR=0.83, 95% CI=0.65–1.06, P=0.14), operative time (MD=6.47, 95% CI=−14.72 to 27.65, P=0.55), blood transfusion (OR=0.77, 95% CI=0.55–1.08, P=0.13), R0 resection (OR=1.45, 95% CI=0.91–2.31, P=0.12), reoperation (OR=0.76, 95% CI=0.31–1.88, P=0.56), and readmission (OR=0.63, 95% CI=0.28–1.44, P=0.27) between RMH and LMH. Incidence of serious complications (OR=0.60, 95% CI=0.40–0.90, P=0.01), conversion to open surgery (OR=0.41, 95% CI=0.27–0.63, P<0.0001), blood loss (MD=−91.42, 95% CI=−142.18 to −40.66, P=0.0004), and postoperative hospital stay (MD=−0.64, 95% CI=−0.78 to −0.49, P<0.00001) were reduced for RMH versus LMH. Conclusions: RMH is associated with comparable short-term surgical outcomes and oncologic adequacy compared to LMH when performed by experienced surgeons at large centres. RMH may result in reduced major morbidities, conversion rate, blood loss, and hospital stay, but these results were volatile. Further randomized studies should address the potential advantages of RMH over LMH.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

General Medicine,Surgery

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