Initial experience of the Versius robotic system in robot-assisted radical prostatectomy: a study of 58 cases

The study presents the initial outcomes of robot-assisted radical prostatectomies (RARPs) using the Versius robotic system in a urological centre with no prior robotic surgery experience. A retrospective analysis of 58 RARPs was conducted, including patients' parameters as well as Versius syste...

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Veröffentlicht in:Central European journal of urology 2024, Vol.77 (1), p.30-36
Hauptverfasser: Polom, Wojciech, Matuszewski, Marcin
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The study presents the initial outcomes of robot-assisted radical prostatectomies (RARPs) using the Versius robotic system in a urological centre with no prior robotic surgery experience. A retrospective analysis of 58 RARPs was conducted, including patients' parameters as well as Versius system performance. The study involved 58 patients (average age 66.9 years). Median preoperative prostate specific antigen (PSA) was 9.8 ng/ml, with 48% having ISUP grade group ≥ 3 on biopsy and 25.8% showing extraprostatic extension on MRI. Median blood loss was 437 ml, with complications (10.3% Clavien-Dindo grade II and 4 grade III cases). One conversion to open surgery occurred (0.58%). Final pathology revealed 46.5% extraprostatic disease, and 25.8% had positive margins. Post-surgery, 96.5% had undetectable PSA at 6 weeks. Continence rates were 89.7% at 6 weeks, increasing to 91.3% at 12 months. Median catheter duration was 7.9 days, and the hospital stay was 4.5 days. Console time averaged 150.9 minutes, with a median operative time of 213 minutes. The Versius system reported medium priority alarms in 24.1% of operations, including 1266 alarms related to robotic arm clashes and 43 instrument swaps. One bedside unit exchange occurred with no console or robotic system failures. The Versius robotic system can be successfully introduced in a urological centre without prior robotic surgery experience. Our setup and operating room positioning are effective, safe, and reproducible. We encountered and resolved surgical and technical challenges. Further follow-up studies are needed to assess the system's performance.
ISSN:2080-4806
2080-4873
2080-4873
DOI:10.5173/ceju.2023.241