Original Article
Robotic hilar cholangiocarcinoma radical resection compared with laparotomy in prognosis
Chou Sai, Chang Zhengyao, Zhao Guodong, Song Dongda, Zhang Xuan, Hu Minggen, Liu Rong
Published 2020-03-01
Cite as Chin J Surg, 2020, 58(3): 230-234. DOI: 10.3760/cma.j.issn.0529-5815.2020.03.012
Abstract
ObjectiveTo compare the long term and short term outcomes between robotic and open surgery for hilar cholangiocarcinoma radical resection.
MethodsThis is a single-center and retrospective case-control study. Patients underwent hilar cholangiocarcinoma radical resection between January 2016 and December 2016 at Department of Hepatobiliary Surgery of the General Hospital of the Chinese People′s Liberation Army were included. Safety, effectiveness and long-term prognosis of tumors were evaluated. Patients were divided into robotic hilar cholangiocarcinoma radical surgery group (robotic group, n=16) and open hepatic hilar cholangiocarcinoma radical surgery group (open group, n=31) . All cases were confirmed by pathology histological. Age, gender, histology, resection margin status, extent of surgical resection, disease-free survival (DFS) , and overall survival (OS) were retrospectively collected and analyzed.In the follow-up cohort, the primary outcome was patient death and the secondary outcome was tumor recurrence. Continuous variables were expressed as means and medians and were compared using the Student t test if normally distributed or Wilcoxon-Mann-Whitney test for nonparametric variables. Discrete variables were expressed as frequency and percentages and χ 2 or Fisher exact test, when appropriate, were used for comparisons. Kaplan-Meier curves were used to calculate the probability of survival and comparisons were performed using log-rank test.
ResultsIn this study, compared with the open group, the robotic group had a longer operation time ( (338±71) minutes vs. (256±56) minutes, t=4.251, P=0.001) , but the intraoperative blood loss was less (100 ml vs. 200 ml, Z=121.50, P=0.040) , the gastric tube removal time was earlier (3 days vs. 4 days, Z=136.0, P=0.011) , and the postoperative hospital stay was shorter (9 days vs. 12 days, Z=144.50, P=0.040) , and the difference was statistically significant.There was no significant difference in the blood transfusion rate, R0 resection rate, and tumor size between the two groups.The recurrence rates in the robotic group and open surgery were 53.3% and 67.0%, respectively (χ2=1.04, P=0.307) .The median survival time of the robotic group and the open group was 22.0 months and 25.0 months. There was no significant difference in the overall survival rate between the two groups (P>0.05) .
ConclusionCompared with laparotomy, robotic HCC radical resection could have an equivalence or non-inferiority approach with acceptable long-term outcome.
Key words:
Bile duct neoplasms; Hepatectomy; Robotics; Robotic hilar cholangiocarcinoma radical resection; Minimally invasive surgery
Contributor Information
Chou Sai
Second Department of Hepatobiliary Surgery, the First Medical Center of People′s Liberation Army General Hospital, Beijing 100853, China
Chang Zhengyao
Zhao Guodong
Song Dongda
Zhang Xuan
Hu Minggen
Liu Rong