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Recovery after minimally invasive right colectomy with intra-corporeal anastomosis as good as extra-corporeal anastomosis
Researchers have found in a new study that postoperative recovery after minimally invasive robotic right colectomy with intra-corporeal anastomosis was as good as extra-corporeal anastomosis. This implies that minimally invasive robotic right colectomy with intra-corporeal anastomosis does not significantly improve postoperative recovery compared to extra-corporeal anastomosis.
The new study has been published in the Annals of Surgery.
Researchers conducted the study to determine if minimally invasive right colectomy with intra-corporeal anastomosis improves postoperative recovery compared to extraanastomosis as good as extra-corporeal anastomosis.
Previous trials have shown that intracorporeal anastomosis improves postoperative recovery; however, it has not yet been evaluated in a setting with optimized perioperative care or with patient-related outcome measures.
This was a multicenter, triple-blind, randomized clinical trial at two high-volume colorectal centers with strict adherence to optimized perioperative care pathways. The patients underwent robotic right colectomy with either intracorporeal or extracorporeal anastomosis. The primary outcome was patient-reported postoperative recovery measured using the “Quality of Recovery–15” questionnaire.
Results:
A total of 89 patients were randomized and analyzed according to the “Intention-to-treat”-principle. We found no statistically significant differences in patient-reported recovery between the groups. Postoperative pain, nausea, time to ambulation, time to first passage of flatus/stool, length of hospital stay, and pathophysiological tests showed no differences either. The duration of time to create the anastomosis was significantly longer with intracorporeal anastomosis (17 vs 13 min, P = 0.003), while all other intraoperative, postoperative, and pathology variables showed no difference.
There were no significant differences in postoperative recovery between the two groups.
Reference:
Dohrn, Niclas MD*,†; Yikilmaz, Helin BMSc†; Laursen, Magnus BMSc*; Khesrawi, Faisal MD†; Clausen, Frederik Bjerg BMSc*; Sørensen, Frederik MSc‡; Jakobsen, Henrik Loft MD*; Brisling, Steffen MD†; Lykke, Jakob MD PhD*; Eriksen, Jens Ravn MD PhD†; Klein, Mads Falk MD PhD*; Gögenur, Ismail MD PhD DMSc†. Intracorporeal Versus Extracorporeal Anastomosis in Robotic Right Colectomy: A Multicenter, Triple-blind, Randomized Clinical Trial. Annals of Surgery 276(5):p e294-e301, November 2022. | DOI: 10.1097/SLA.0000000000005254
Dr. Shravani Dali has completed her BDS from Pravara institute of medical sciences, loni. Following which she extensively worked in the healthcare sector for 2+ years. She has been actively involved in writing blogs in field of health and wellness. Currently she is pursuing her Masters of public health-health administration from Tata institute of social sciences. She can be contacted at editorial@medicaldialogues.in.
Dr Kamal Kant Kohli-MBBS, DTCD- a chest specialist with more than 30 years of practice and a flair for writing clinical articles, Dr Kamal Kant Kohli joined Medical Dialogues as a Chief Editor of Medical News. Besides writing articles, as an editor, he proofreads and verifies all the medical content published on Medical Dialogues including those coming from journals, studies,medical conferences,guidelines etc. Email: drkohli@medicaldialogues.in. Contact no. 011-43720751