Does robotic-assisted transabdominal preperitoneal (R-TAPP) hernia repair facilitate contralateral investigation and repair without compromising patient morbidity?

Department

Surgery

Document Type

Article

Publication Title

Journal Of Robotic Surgery

Abstract

Inguinal hernia repair (IHR) is performed through either an open or minimally invasive approach (MIS). MIS allows for exploration and potential repair of an occult contralateral hernia. The aim of this study is to evaluate complications associated with intraoperative contralateral exploration and repair through robotic-assisted (da Vinci) IHR. 652 robotic-assisted inguinal hernia procedures were uniformly and retrospectively collected from seven surgeons. Incidental contralateral findings were evaluated and populations with and without contralateral findings were compared in terms of demographics, operative characteristics and complications. This case series includes the earliest cases in each surgeon's robotic-assisted IHR experience. Seventy-one percent (71%) of patients presented with a unilateral hernia. Intraoperative/incidental contralateral ("occult") hernias were found in 12.3% of patients with a unilateral diagnosis. For patients with and without contralateral findings, there were no significant differences in demographics and baseline health characteristics. Perioperative morbidity was statistically similar between groups: intraoperative complications (0 vs 0.5%, p = 1.000), postoperative complications prior to discharge (0 vs 3.2%, p = 0.38) and from discharge through 30 days (5.3 vs 4.0%, p = 0.72), as well as readmissions and reoperations related to the repair within 30 days. Differences in setting of care, length of stay, rate of blood transfusions, concomitant procedures and conversions were nonsignificant. Mean operative time was longer in patients with a contralateral hernia by 19 min (p < 0.0001). Intraoperative contralateral exploration and subsequent repair during robotic-assisted IHR does not compromise perioperative patient morbidity. These study results support the increasing evidence for repair of contralateral, incidentally discovered inguinal hernias.Clinicaltrials.Gov ID number: NCT02684448.

First Page

713

Last Page

718

DOI

10.1007/s11701-018-0815-4

Volume

12

Issue

4

Publication Date

12-1-2018

Medical Subject Headings

Blood Transfusion; Female; Hernia, Inguinal (surgery); Herniorrhaphy (adverse effects, methods); Humans; Incidental Findings; Intraoperative Complications; Length of Stay; Male; Middle Aged; Operative Time; Postoperative Complications; Reoperation; Retrospective Studies; Robotic Surgical Procedures (adverse effects, methods)

PubMed ID

29713930

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