Affiliation:
1. Northern Clinical School, Sydney Medical School, Faculty of Medicine and Health University of Sydney Sydney New South Wales 2006 Australia
2. Endocrine Surgery Unit University of Sydney Sydney New South Wales 2065 Australia
Abstract
AbstractBackgroundIn the context of minimally invasive adrenal surgery, there remains debate about whether the transperitoneal adrenalectomy (TPA) and posterior retroperitoneoscopic adrenalectomy (PRA) approach have equivalent indications. This study aims to examine complication and conversion rates associated with three surgical approaches for adrenal tumours over the last 17 years in a specialized endocrine surgical unit.MethodsAll adrenalectomy cases performed in the period 2005–2021 were identified within a prospectively maintained surgical database. A retrospective cohort study was undertaken with patients divided into two cohorts (2005–2013 and 2014–2021). Surgical approach (open adrenalectomy (OA), TPA, PRA), tumour size, histopathology, complication and conversion rates were compared.ResultsDuring the study period, 596 patients underwent adrenalectomy with 31 and 40 cases each year per cohort. The dominant surgical approach per cohort significantly changed from TPA (79% versus 17%) to PRA (8% versus 69%, P < 0.001), whilst the frequency of OA remained stable (13% versus 15%). TPA removed larger tumours (3.0 ± 2.9 cm) than PRA (2.8 ± 2.2 cm, P = 0.02), with the median size increasing from 3.0 ± 2.5 to 4.5 ± 3.5 cm per cohort (P < 0.001). The maximum tumour sizes treated by TPA and PRA were 15 and 12 cm, respectively. Adrenocortical adenoma was the commonest pathology treated by either laparoscopic technique. Complication rates were greatest for OA (30.1%) with no significant difference between minimally invasive approaches (TPA 7.3%, PRA 8.3%, P = 0.7). Both laparoscopic techniques had equivalent conversion rates (3.6%). PRA was preferably converted to TPA (2.8%) over OA (0.8%).ConclusionThis study demonstrates the transition from TPA to PRA, offering similarly low complication and conversion rates.