Robotic surgery trends in general surgical oncology from the National Inpatient Sample

Background Robotic surgery is offered at most major medical institutions. The extent of its use within general surgical oncology, however, is poorly understood. We hypothesized that robotic surgery adoption in surgical oncology is increasing annually, that is occurring in all surgical sites, and all...

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Veröffentlicht in:Surgical endoscopy 2019-08, Vol.33 (8), p.2591-2601
Hauptverfasser: Stewart, Camille L., Ituarte, Philip H. G., Melstrom, Kurt A., Warner, Susanne G., Melstrom, Laleh G., Lai, Lily L., Fong, Yuman, Woo, Yanghee
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Background Robotic surgery is offered at most major medical institutions. The extent of its use within general surgical oncology, however, is poorly understood. We hypothesized that robotic surgery adoption in surgical oncology is increasing annually, that is occurring in all surgical sites, and all regions of the US. Study design We identified patients with site-specific malignancies treated with surgical resection from the National Inpatient Sample 2010–2014 databases. Operations were considered robotic if any ICD-9-CM robotic procedure code was used. Results We identified 147,259 patients representing the following sites: esophageal (3%), stomach (5%), small bowel (5%), pancreas (7%), liver (5%), and colorectal (75%). Most operations were open (71%), followed by laparoscopic (26%), and robotic (3%). In 2010, only 1.1% of operations were robotic; over the 5-year study period, there was a 5.0-fold increase in robotic surgery, compared to 1.1-fold increase in laparoscopy and 1.2-fold decrease in open surgery (
ISSN:0930-2794
1432-2218
DOI:10.1007/s00464-018-6554-9