1 / 54

Robotic Surgery: Surgery of the Future?

2 nd Annual Ellison Pierce Symposium Positioning Your ORs For The Future. Robotic Surgery: Surgery of the Future?. David S. Wang, MD Assistant Professor of Urology. Boston University School of Medicine May 19, 2006. 1:20-2:00pm. What is the status of robotic surgery at your hospital?.

henrik
Télécharger la présentation

Robotic Surgery: Surgery of the Future?

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. 2nd Annual Ellison Pierce Symposium Positioning Your ORs For The Future Robotic Surgery:Surgery of the Future? David S. Wang, MD Assistant Professor of Urology Boston University School of Medicine May 19, 2006 1:20-2:00pm

  2. What is the status of robotic surgery at your hospital? QUESTION: • Not available • Available • Purchase pending • Exploring options 0/0

  3. If you were asked the best approach for a radical retropubic prostatectomy, what would you recommend? QUESTION: • Open procedure • Laparoscopic procedure • Robotic procedure 0/0

  4. ROBOTIC SURGERY Overview • Introduction to Robotics • Cardiac Applications • Urologic – Robotic prostatectomy • How to build a successful robotics program

  5. Goals of Robotics • Expand minimally invasive surgery to new surgical procedures and specialties • Improve the surgeon’s clinical capabilities • Improve patient outcomes

  6. Limitations of Traditional Laparoscopic Surgery • 2-D vision, hands and instruments misaligned, hand tremor • Long instruments, hands & wrists outside patient • Fixed instrument tips inside patient • Steep learning curve • Suturing difficulty

  7. da Vinci™ Surgical System

  8. da Vinci™ Surgical System • Surgical Cart • Surgeon Console • InSite™ Vision System

  9. da Vinci™ Surgical System • Surgeon Console • Hand to eye alignment • Natural movements • Ergonomic surgeon position • Camera control by Surgeon

  10. da Vinci™ Surgical System • Superior 3-D image • Stereoscopic design with two 3-chip cameras • Better resolution than standard laparoscopy tower 3-D Vision System Open surgery orientation

  11. da Vinci™ Surgical System • Surgical Cart • 3 Instrument Arms with multiple joints provide access to entire anatomy • Single unit design • Set-up time 5 to 15 minutes

  12. da Vinci™ Surgical System • Eliminates tremor • Enables ambidexterity • Provides motion scaling from 2:1 to 5:1 • Accelerates learning curve

  13. da Vinci™ Surgical System EndoWristTM Instruments • Modeled after the human wrist • 6 Degrees of freedom • Natural control without buttons or knobs • Surgical hand movements are transposed to the instrument tips

  14. Robotic Endowrist Instruments

  15. da Vinci™ Procedures Completed • Radical Prostatectomy • Pyeloplasty • Ureter Reimplant • Donor Nephrectomy • Nephrectomy • Ureterolithotomy • Adrenalectomy • Cystocele Repair • Excision of Renal Cyst • Lymphadenectomy • Varicocelectomy Urology General Cardiac Valve Surgery CABG Nissen Fundoplication Bariatric Surgery Cholecystectomy Hernia Repair Lysis of Adhesions Arteriovenous Fistula Toupet Esophagogastectomy Adrenalectomy Gastric Bypass Colon Resection Pyloroplasty Heller Myotomy Gastroplasty Appendectomy Intra-rectal Surgery Sigmoidectomy Bowel Resection Lumbar Sympathectomy Ventral Hernia Splenectomy Hemicolectomy Gynecology Hysterectomy Radical Hysterectomy Tubal Reanastomosis Myomectomy Lysis of Adhesions Pelvic Floor Reconstruction

  16. CARDIAC APPLICATIONS

  17. Mitral Valve Repair Introduction • Shorter hospital stay • Less pain and scarring • Less risk of infection • Less blood loss and fewer transfusions • Faster recovery • Quicker return to normal activities

  18. Mitral Valve Repair Nifong et. Al, 2005 • 1st Robotic mitral valve in 2000 • US Multicenter trial • 112 patients at 10 centers • Robotic mitral valve repair • Small right mini-thoracotomy • 0 deaths, strokes, device-related complications • Re-operation rate of 5.4%

  19. Mitral Valve Repair Chitwood et al 2005 • 100 davinci robotic mitral repairs • 1% mortality • Complication rate low • ? Evolve into standard of care?

  20. Mitral Valve Repair

  21. Contact Information

  22. Mitral Valve Repair

  23. Mitral Valve Repair

  24. CABG Introduction • Beating Heart • LIMA • LAD

  25. ROBOTIC RADICAL PROSTATECTOMY

  26. Prostate Cancer Introduction • Most common solid cancer among males • Second most frequent cause of cancer deaths in males • 225,000 new cases per year • 31,500 men died in 2002

  27. Prostate Cancer Surgical Treatment Options • Open Radical Prostatectomy • Potential for large blood loss • 25% transfusion rate • 3 to 4 day hospitalization • Difficult visualization of the pelvis • Laparoscopic Radical Prostatectomy • Robotic Prostatectomy

  28. SURGERY Anatomy

  29. Robotic Assisted Prostatectomy • Benefits of laparoscopic surgery • Improved visualization of anatomy • Ease of knot tying • Excellent anastomosis • Reduced blood loss • ? Improved continence and sexual function

  30. Robotic Radical Prostatectomy Who is a candidate? • Localized prostate cancer • Generally good health • No prior pelvic surgery • >10-year life expectancy

  31. Robotic Radical Prostatectomy • Confirm diagnosis of prostate cancer (slides reviewed at BMC) • Prostate surgery should be performed at least 6 weeks after biopsy • Medical clearance from primary care physician • Bowel preparation day before surgery Pre-operative Preparation

  32. Robotic Radical Prostatectomy Expected Hospital Course • Admitted day of surgery • General anesthesia • Operation generally lasts ~3 hours • Clear liquid diet after surgery • Regular diet day after surgery • Most patients discharged on the day after surgery

  33. Robotic Radical Prostatectomy • Home with catheter in bladder • Catheter removed in 10 days • Resume usual activity ~2 weeks • Back to normal 4-6 weeks • Continence >90% Postoperative Course

  34. Robotic Radical Prostatectomy Potential Risks of the Procedure • Conversion to open procedure • Injury to surrounding organs • Rectal injury • Incontinence • Erectile Dysfunction

  35. Patient Positioning

  36. PORTPLACEMENT ROBOT

  37. Laparoscopic Robotic Prostatectomy

  38. Laparoscopic Robotic Prostatectomy

  39. Laparoscopic Robotic Prostatectomy Menon et al. J Urol 2003 • Henry Ford Hospital in Detroit • >350 patients • OR time 160 minutes • EBL 153 cc • 6% positive margin rate • 6 months • 82% age < 60 potent • 96% continent

  40. Laparoscopic Robotic Prostatectomy Boston Medical Center • 2 urologic surgeons • One surgeon – extensive laparoscopic experience • One surgeon – extensive open experience • Dedicated OR team • Site visits and training sessions • Due diligence • DaVinci acquired January 2005

  41. Laparoscopic Robotic Prostatectomy Boston Medical Center – First 50 cases • First robotic radical prostatectomy in Mass. • Operative time first case – 8 hours • Time to 5 hour proficiency – ~10 cases • Current surgical time – 2.5 to 3.5 hours • Critical review of videotapes – improving upon technique • No conversions to open procedure • 1 case aborted – unrelated to robotics

  42. Laparoscopic Robotic Prostatectomy Boston Medical Center – First 35 cases • Blood loss 100 to 200 cc – 1 pt transfused • Complication rate 6% • Majority of patients discharged POD#1 or POD#2 • Positive margin rate – 14% • Early continence >80% • Late continence – too soon to tell • Erectile function – too soon to tell

  43. Conclusions Robotic Prostatectomy • Successful establishment of robotics program in Urology at BMC • Learning curve reduced using team approach • Less blood loss • Faster patient recovery • Low complication rate • + margin rate comparable to open surgery • ? Surgery of the future

  44. BUILDING A SUCCESSFUL ROBOTICS PROGRAM

  45. Building Robotics Program Planning Committee • Prior to purchasing robot • Members • Surgeons (Urology, Cardiac, Gyn, GSurg) • Anesthesiologists • OR Staff • Nurses • Finance Officer • Strategic Planning • Marketing • Biomed/Engineering

  46. Building Robotics Program Who will use the robot? • Limit number of surgeons in the beginning • Need to have dedicated physicians who have done due diligence • Limit number of staff who work with robotics

  47. Building Robotics Program Site Visits • Intuitive Surgical – visit your hospital to ensure that facility is adequate to accommodate robotic unit • Visit other sites – Robot TEAM to visit robotic site to understand and see robot in action

  48. Building Robotics Program After Robot Purchased • Dry lab sessions • Surgeons – comfortable • Staff – comfortable • Familiarity with equipment • Appropriate instruments

More Related