The application of robotics in plastic and reconstructive surgery: A systematic review

Author:

Ruccia Francesca1,Mavilakandy Akash2ORCID,Imtiaz Hassan3,Erskine John4,Liew Yong Yie5,Ali Meyada6,Khajuria Ankur78

Affiliation:

1. Department of Plastic Surgery The Royal Marsden Hospital NHS Foundation Trust London UK

2. Department of Internal Medicine The University Hospitals of Leicester NHS Foundation Trust Leicester UK

3. Poole General Hospital University Hospitals Dorset NHS Foundation Trust Poole UK

4. Department of Internal Medicine University Hospital Lewisham Lewisham Greenwich NHS Trust London UK

5. Department of Neurosurgery Lancashire Teaching Hospital NHS Foundation Trust Preston UK

6. The George Eliot Hospital NHS Trust Nuneaton UK

7. Kellogg College Nuffield Department of Surgical Sciences University of Oxford Oxford UK

8. Department of Surgery and Cancer Imperial College London London UK

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundRobotic assisted surgery (RAS) has seen significant advancement in many surgical specialties, although the application of robotics in plastic and reconstructive surgery remains to be widely established. This systematic review aims to assess the role of RAS in plastic and reconstructive surgery.MethodsThe review protocol was published and registered a priori as CRD42024507420. A comprehensive electronic search for relevant studies was performed in MEDLINE, Embase and Google scholar databases.ResultsOverall, 132 studies were initially identified, of which, 44 studies satisfied the eligibility criteria with a cumulative total of 239 patients. RAS demonstrated a high degree of procedural success and anastomotic patency in microvascular procedures. There was no significant difference in periprocedural adverse events between robotic and manual procedures.ConclusionRAS can be feasibly implemented in plastic and reconstructive surgery with a good efficacy and safety profile, particularly for microsurgical anastomosis and trans‐oral surgery.

Publisher

Wiley

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