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Robotic thyroid surgery: Our experience with the infraclavicular approach

Benjamin Lallemant, Guillaume Chambon, Damien Rupp, Christophe Reynaud, Caroline Alovisetti, Sophie Kacha, Jean‐Gabriel Lallemant, V. Trévillot

Year
2011
Citations
10

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Robot-assisted endoscopic transaxillary thyroidectomy is an emerging surgical technique. Despite promising results it presents some limitations and remains controversial in terms of usefulness and validity. We developed an alternative robotic technique using a gasless infraclavicular approach. METHODS: We tested this approach using cadaveric dissection, then we performed the technique on a series of 21 patients from October 2009 to July 2010. RESULTS: Sixteen patients underwent total thyroidectomy and 5 patients underwent lobectomies. Mean total operative time was 197 minutes. We observed postoperative complications in 4 patients. Pathologic diagnoses included: benign follicular adenoma (19 patients) and single papillary carcinoma <1 cm in diameter pT1a (2 patients). CONCLUSIONS: The infraclavicular approach for robotic thyroidectomy is feasible, but is not safe enough to be recommended, based on our experience and on the technical difficulties encountered. The use of 2 robotic arms instead of 3 is a major limitation for this technique.

Keywords

MedicineSurgeryThyroidectomyCadaveric spasmThyroidDissection (medical)Papillary carcinomaRobotic surgeryGeneral surgeryThyroid carcinoma

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