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Clinical Trial Summary

This retrospective study evaluates the security and the effectiveness of robotic adrenalectomy when compared to laparoscopic approach in patients who underwent minimally-invasive lateral transperitoneal unilateral adrenalectomy.


Clinical Trial Description

During the last twenty years, minimally-invasive surgery became the first choice for the surgical treatment of most of adrenal diseases. Such minimally-invasive techniques success in mainly related to the significative post-operative morbidity reduction. Adrenalectomy is a technical demanding procedure, requiring a cautious and precise dissection in the retroperitoneal space, so that endoscopic magnification may represent an essential tool. Several minimally-invasive approaches to adrenalectomy have been described, including anterior and lateral laparoscopic or lateral and posterior retroperitoneal techniques. Lateral transabdominal approach is the most frequently used for robotic adrenalectomy. However, routinary use of robotic platforms is limitated by their high costs. Laparoscopic adrenalectomy was described by Gagner at al. in 1992, by means of a lateral transperitoneal approach. Several retrospective studies showed the advantages of laparoscopic approach compared to laparotomic procedure, such as lower post-operative pain, morbidity and hospital stay. Lateral transabdominal laparoscopic adrenalectomy is nowadays the most frequently used technique. One of the main advantages is related to the possibility of using the gravity effect during surgical dissection. Indeed, after the mobilization of the anatomic structures next to the adrenal gland (liver on the right side and splenopancreatic block on the left side), no more manipulations are necessary during the procedure. Moreover, this approach guarantees a wide working space, with the exposure of conventional anatomic landmarks, allowing an adequate vascular control. A further advantage consists of the possibility of exploring the whole abdominal cavity, therefore permitting the treatment of other surgical clinical conditions. Technically speaking, the main condition for the procedure success is a complete knowledge of surgical anatomy and an adequate surgical expertise, so that different approaches may be chosen basing on both patient's and lesion's features. In 1999 Piazza et al. and Hubens et al. described robotic approach to adrenalectomy by means of AESOP 2000 platform. Then, "Da Vinci" platform (Intuitive Surgical, Sunnyvale, CA, USA) was introduced in clinical practice. After that, robotic adrenalectomies have been performed in several centers, proving the safety and feasibility of such procedure. "Da Vinci" platform allowed to maintain the same advantages of minimally-invasive approaches, with a reduction of the difficulties due to their technical limitations. Indeed, ergonomic superiority, tridimensional vision, tremors reduction and major freedom degrees related to the robotic instruments allow an easier surgical dissection. Minimally-invasive adrenalectomy is the gold standard for the treatment of <6 cm adrenal lesions. Feasibility of endoscopic adrenalectomy for the treatment of wider or suspected for malignancy adrenal lesions still remains debated. National Institute of Health (NIH) Position Statement showed that adrenal cortical carcinoma prevalence is directly related to the lesion diameter, representing 2% of <4 cm lesions, 6% of 4,1-6 cm lesions and 25% of >6 cm lesions. However, lesion diameter alone is a too aspecific factor to be considered the parameter of choice of the surgical approach. Indeed, about 75% of >6 cm adrenal lesions result benign after definitive histological examination. Furthermore, several works in literature showed that the oncologic radicality of minimally-invasive approaches to localized malignant lesions is not inferior comparing to conventional laparotomic procedures. However, European Society of Endocrine Surgeon (ESES) and European Network for the Study of Adrenal Tumors (ENSAT) for the treatment of adrenal lesions suggest that transperitoneal approach should be the procedure of choice to guarantee optimal intraoperative stadiation, complete oncologic resection, capsular effraction risk and verify loco-regional structures infiltration. Most studies demonstrated that TLA is a safe and effective procedure with low morbidity and mortality rates. Post-operative complications rates are not easy to interpretate due to the lack of standardization among the studies, though their range could be assessed between 2.9 and 15.5%. Complications and conversions risk factors, such as surgeon's expertice and center's volume, patient's anatomical characteristics and lesion's features, have been evaluated in monocentric and multicentric studies. More precisely, volume center and surgical expertise impact on clinical outcome have been demonstrated in several studies. Park et al. published a retrospective analysis of 344 adrenalectomies and documented a major complications rate (18.3 vs 11.3%) and a longer hospital stay (5.5 vs 3.9 days) in those procedures performed in center with low volume. Also, Palazzo et al. showed a significative increase in hospital stay and readmission within 30 days in low volume centers. Bergamini et al. identified age, BMI, lesion diameter and catecholaminergic secretion as risk factors for complications, with low complications rates in referral centers. Among patients' characteristics, the major risk factors for complications and conversions were obesity, history of abdominal surgery, lesion side, patients comorbidity and catecholaminergic secretion. Obesity (BMI≥30 Kg/m2) has been reported as a risk factor for post-operative complications. However, more recently such conditions turned to be associated only to an operative time increasing. History of abdominal surgery has been also reported as a risk factor for intra- and post-operative complications. However, recent case series proved that TLA performed after previous abdominal surgery did not lead to major conversion and complications rates. Lesion diameter has been evaluated in several experiences as complications risk factor, with different dimensional cut-off. An higher post-operative complications rate have been reported in patients with lesions >60 mm. However, other studies with different cut-off (60-80 mm) did not confirm such results. To date, conversion rate to laparotomic surgery set to a median of 2%, with a range of 0-13%. Vascular and organs' lesions, as well as the technical difficulties, are the most frequent causes of conversion. The TLA-related reported mortality is 0-0.8%. The most frequent causes of death are massive bleeding, pancreatitis, pulmonary embolism and sepsis. Systematic reviews and meta-analysis showed the safety and effectiveness of the robotic approach to adrenalectomy. The reported operative times are different among the published works in literature, with median values of 98-234 minutes. Brunaud et al. identified some criteria that might influence the operative times, such as surgeon's expertise, the assistant training level, lesion diameter (with lower times in case of lesion<45 mm). Longer operative times are tipically associated with the beginning of the surgical experience and may be related to the docking. However, in referral centers with high experience in endoscopic adrenal surgery, docking times are significantly reduced after the learning curve is completed. In our experience, docking time requires about 10 minutes to be completed. Blood loss and hospital stay length are generally considered comparable to TLA. However, several authors report less blood loss and shorter hospital stay in case of robotic adrenalectomy. Robotic surgery conversion rates to the laparoscopic and laparotomic approach vary between 0% - 40% and 0% - 10%, respectively. Conversion-related conditions are adhesions, bleeding and technical difficulties. Retrospective series and meta-analysis confirmed that laparoscopic and robotic morbidity and mortality rates are comparable. High costs still represent a limitation of robotic procedures. Brunaud et al. evidenced 2.3 times higher costs for robotic approach. Total costs are proportional to total procedures per year and to instruments costs, while operative time has a marginal role. Similar results have been published by Morino et al. Some authors achieved different results, as costs analysis was influenced by the specific health system reimbursement. In De Crea et al. cost-analysis 131 patients who underwent adrenalectomy between January 2017 and September 2019 (39 PRA, 80 TLA and 12 RA) have been compared. Cost-analysis considered Italian Health system reimbursement basing on Diagnosis Related Group (DRG). All the procedures, including RA, presented positive marginality, with comparable values between PRA and TLA, superior to RA in both cases. Thoughout a subgroups analysius, marginality difference between RA and the other approaches was reduced of 20% in case of lesion >4 cm. The results confirmed that RA may present advantages in case of challenging cases, such as obese patients or large lesions. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT05853302
Study type Observational
Source Fondazione Policlinico Universitario Agostino Gemelli IRCCS
Contact Francesco Pennestrì, Dr
Phone +393280244528
Email francesco.pennestri@policlinicogemelli.it
Status Recruiting
Phase
Start date December 15, 2022
Completion date September 2023

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