Robot assisted laparoscopic adrenalectomy: Should this be the new standard?

Journal: Urologia
Published:
Abstract

Minimal invasive surgeries (MIS) for large size adrenal tumors are still debatable. The objective is to evaluate the contemporary peri- and post-operative outcomes of patients undergoing (open = OA, laparoscopic = LA, and robotic = RA) adrenalectomies in three institutions. Retrospectively gathered peri- and post-operative data of 235 patients, underwent adrenalectomy at three Institutions over a 7-year period (2013-2020) were analyzed. All patients underwent thorough radiological and endocrine workup. Two hundred and thirty five patients who underwent adrenalectomy (OA (n = 29), LA (n = 146), and RA (n = 60)) were assessed. OA (n = 29) versus Minimally invasive surgery (n = 206) showed significant differences (median, p value) in larger tumour size, cm (9.4 vs 5, (p = 0.0001)), longer operative time, mins (240 vs 100, (p = 0.0001)), longer hospital stay, days (8 vs 3,(p = .0001)), Higher readmission rates (14% vs 1.9%), higher blood loss, ml (400 vs 100, (p = 0.0001)) requiring blood transfusion (14% vs 4.3%) (p = 0.03), higher intraoperative complication (21% vs 6%) (p = 0.0004), and post op complications (17% vs 5.3%) (p = 0.01). Amongst the MIS (RA vs LA), RA appeared be have better outcomes in terms of shorter operative time, less blood loss and less intra operative complications with a p value <0.05. These results were consistent for the assessment of patients who had ⩾6 cm tumor size. The postoperative complication rates were lowest with RA (3.3%) compared to OA (17%) and LA (6.1%). Contemporary practice of adrenalectomy shows that robotic adrenalectomy is safe and effective irrespective of the tumor size.

Authors
Nivash Selvaraj, Ginil Pooleri, Sanjai Addla, Deepak Raghavan, Thirumalai Govindaswamy, Arun Balakrishnan, Ananthakrishnan Sivaraman, Nitesh Jain, Shreedhar Kandasamy, Narasimhan Ragavan
Relevant Conditions

Adrenal Cancer, Endoscopy