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- Carl R Schmidt, Britney R Harris, Kelsey A Musgrove, Pavan Rao, Marsh J Wallis JW Department of Surgery, West Virginia University, Morgantown, West Virginia, USA., Alan A Thomay, Melissa E Hogg, Herbert J Zeh, Amer H Zureikat, and Brian A Boone.
- Department of Surgery, West Virginia University, Morgantown, West Virginia, USA.
- J Surg Oncol. 2021 Feb 1; 123 (2): 375-380.
IntroductionThe learning curve associated with robotic pancreatoduodenectomy (RPD) is a hurdle for new programs to achieve optimal results. Since early analysis, robotic training has recently expanded, and the RPD approach has been refined. The purpose of this study is to examine RPD outcomes for surgeons who implemented a new program after receiving formal RPD training to determine if such training reduces the learning curve.MethodsOutcomes for consecutive patients undergoing RPD at a single tertiary institution were compared to optimal RPD benchmarks from a previously reported learning curve analysis. Two surgical oncologists with formal RPD training performed all operations with one surgeon as bedside assistant and the other at the console.ResultsForty consecutive RPD operations were evaluated. Mean operative time was 354 ± 54 min, and blood loss was 300 ml. Length of stay was 7 days. Three patients (7.5%) underwent conversion to open. Pancreatic fistula affected five patients (12.5%). Operative time was stable over the study and lower than the reported benchmark. These RPD operative outcomes were similar to reported surgeon outcomes after the learning curve.ConclusionThis study suggests formal robotic training facilitates safe and efficient adoption of RPD for new programs, reducing or eliminating the learning curve.© 2020 Wiley Periodicals LLC.
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