I am unable to contain myself for another minute. Let’s talk about robotic surgery.
This is from How Stuff Works, a Discovery Company, but it could have been written by the makers of the surgical robot:
“Most surgeries require nearly a dozen people in the room. As with all automation, surgical robots will eventually eliminate the need for some personnel.”
This is another example of a “straw man.” [Establish a false premise and defeat it with your argument.] Just about all operations require five people—surgeon, assistant, scrub nurse, circulating nurse, anesthesiologist. Some complex procedures might require another assistant. A dozen people might be needed for separation of Siamese twins or bilateral leg transplants.
There are many theoretical advantages of robotic surgery over conventional laparoscopy such as elimination of hand tremors, availability of more flexible instruments, more precise movements, easier learning and execution of intra-corporeal suturing techniques and possibly others. Disadvantages include the costs associated with robotic technology with the robotic itself selling for $1-2 million, yearly service contracts of >$300,000 and the high cost of the specialized instruments. Also, robotic surgery takes much longer than conventional surgery.
The problem with robotic surgery is that it has never been shown to improve patient outcomes for any procedure. Let’s look at the literature. The review articles cited below are almost exclusively based on non-randomized studies.
Laparoscopic Cholecystectomy. A review by the noted Cochrane Group involving five studies and 453 patients showed no differences in any outcome measure when comparing robotic surgery to conventional laparoscopic surgery.
Esophageal Reflux Disease. A review of 11 papers comparing standard laparoscopic anti-reflux surgery to Robot-Assisted Laparoscopic Fundoplication [acronym “RALF”] in 533 patients showed no differences in peri-operative complication rates or length of hospital stay. The robotic procedure took significantly longer. Another recent paper demonstrates the lack of quality research on this topic.
Colorectal Surgery. A review of 17 studies, one of which was randomized and controlled, showed no difference in the rates of complications and cancer outcomes. Robotic procedures took longer an cost more than conventional laparoscopic colon surgery. Despite the results, the authors felt that “Robotic colorectal surgery is a promising field and may provide a powerful additional tool…”
Gynecologic Surgery. A review of 22 non-randomized studies found that robotic surgery resulted in less blood loss [statistically significant but not clinically significant differences] and shorter hospital stays but no differences in overall complication rates when compared to conventional laparoscopic or open surgery. The authors commented that the methods used in the papers reviewed were poor and better studies are needed before concluding that robotic surgery offered any true advantages.
Abdominal Surgery. A paper from 2010 looked at 31 studies of nine different abdominal operations [robotic vs. conventional laparoscopic], 6 of which were randomized, controlled trials [RCTs]. The total number of patients included in all the studies was 2166. The number of patients who were participants in RCTs was 230. No RCT involved more than 50 patients. Not surprising was that the results were mixed with robotic surgery offering no clear advantage. These authors also called for larger and better designed studies.
Prostate Cancer. To date, there are no good RCTs comparing robotic to open or standard laparoscopic prostatectomy. This quote from a recent review of the literature on prostate cancer surgery says it all:
“Robotic prostatectomy is definitely here to stay and although a randomized, controlled trial comparing the open to robotic techniques would be ideal, it is clear that this is unlikely to occur.”
UPDATE [9/17/2011]
Robotic hysterectomy outcomes are no better than standard procedures reports a new study. It also suggests the procedures are driven by marketing.
UPDATE [12/29/2011]
Add gastrectomy to the list of procedures that do not show better outcomes when done robotically.
UPDATE [9/17/2011]
Robotic hysterectomy outcomes are no better than standard procedures reports a new study. It also suggests the procedures are driven by marketing.
UPDATE [12/29/2011]
Add gastrectomy to the list of procedures that do not show better outcomes when done robotically.
UPDATE [1/3/2012]
ENT surgeon, @FauquierENT, dismisses robotic surgery for sleep apnea as "way overkill akin to using a $50,000 sniper rifle to kill an ant on the wall."
ENT surgeon, @FauquierENT, dismisses robotic surgery for sleep apnea as "way overkill akin to using a $50,000 sniper rifle to kill an ant on the wall."
The issue may already be settled. According to the New York Times, patients are voting with their feet, preferring to have robotic surgery when it is available. This appears to be true in Wisconsin as well. A recent paper reveals that when hospital purchase a robot, their volume of prostate cancer surgery doubles.
Questions. Can anything be done about this? Should Medicare and private insurance companies pay for expensive, unproven treatments?