Home /Research /Perioperative outcomes of robotic pancreaticoduodenectomy: a single surgeon’s experience with 55 consecutive cases
SURGICAL

Perioperative outcomes of robotic pancreaticoduodenectomy: a single surgeon’s experience with 55 consecutive cases

Ronggui Lin, Xianchao Lin, Maoen Pan, Fengchun Lu, Yuanyuan Yang, Congfei Wang, Haizong Fang, Yanchang Chen, Heguang Huang

Year
2021
Citations
5
Access
Open access

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Robotic pancreaticoduodenectomy (RPD) has been increasingly performed for patients with periampullary tumours and tumours in the pancreatic head. This method offers several technical advantages compared to open and laparoscopic surgeries. However, the surgical results often vary depending on the experience of different pancreatic centres. METHODS: A retrospective study of our first 55 cases of RPD from August 2016 to April 2020 was conducted to evaluate the perioperative outcomes of RPD and to summarize the operative experiences in a single intuition. Benign and malignant tumours in the pancreatic head or periampullary tumours without obvious vascular and adjacent organ invasion were included in this study. Perioperative characteristics and postoperative complications of the enrolled patients were retrospectively collected. RESULTS: 362.4±75.6 min, P=0.047). The incidences of biliary leakage, chyle leakage, DGE, intra-abdominal infection and intra-abdominal haemorrhage were 3.6%, 0.0%, 5.5%, 9.1% and 5.5%, respectively. Two patients underwent relaparotomy due to severe intra-abdominal haemorrhage. The median length of hospital stay was 14 (11 to 19) days. There were no deaths during the perioperative period. CONCLUSIONS: RPD is a technically feasible procedure for selected patients with periampullary tumours and tumours in the pancreatic head in experienced hands.

Keywords

MedicinePerioperativePancreaticoduodenectomySurgeryChyleRetrospective cohort studyPancreatic headGeneral surgeryPeriampullary cancerComplication

Related papers

Browse all SURGICAL papers