Review Open Access
Copyright ©The Author(s) 2017. Published by Baishideng Publishing Group Inc. All rights reserved.
World J Gastrointest Endosc. Jan 16, 2017; 9(1): 1-11
Published online Jan 16, 2017. doi: 10.4253/wjge.v9.i1.1
Robot-assisted laparoscopic gastrectomy for gastric cancer
Stefano Caruso, Franco Franceschini, Department of General Surgery and Surgical Specialties, Unit of General Surgery, “Santa Maria Annunziata” Hospital, 50012 Florence, Italy
Alberto Patriti, Department of Surgery, General Minimally Invasive and Robotic Surgery, “San Matteo degli Infermi” Hospital, 06049 Spoleto, Italy
Franco Roviello, Department of Medical, Surgical and Neuroscience, Unit of General and Minimally Invasive Surgery, University of Siena, 53100 Siena, Italy
Mario Annecchiarico, Andrea Coratti, Division of Oncological and Robotic General Surgery, “Careggi” University Hospital, 50134 Florence, Italy
Graziano Ceccarelli, Department of Medicine and General Surgery, Unit of Minimally Invasive and General Surgery, “San Donato” Hospital, 52100 Arezzo, Italy
Author contributions: Caruso S wrote and conceived the study; Franceschini F and Annecchiarico M contributed to the literature search and acquisition of data; Patriti A, Roviello F, Ceccarelli G and Coratti A contributed to the critical appraisal of the work, revising the article critically for important intellectual content.
Conflict-of-interest statement: All authors disclose any potential or actual personal, political or financial conflict of interest in the material, information or techniques described in the paper.
Open-Access: This article is an open-access article which was selected by an in-house editor and fully peer-reviewed by external reviewers. It is distributed in accordance with the Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial (CC BY-NC 4.0) license, which permits others to distribute, remix, adapt, build upon this work non-commercially, and license their derivative works on different terms, provided the original work is properly cited and the use is non-commercial. See: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/
Correspondence to: Stefano Caruso, MD, Department of General Surgery and Surgical Specialties, Unit of General Surgery, “Santa Maria Annunziata” Hospital, ASL Firenze, Via dell’Antella 58, Bagno a Ripoli, 50012 Florence, Italy. stefano.caruso@teletu.it
Telephone: +39-55-9508373
Received: June 22, 2016
Peer-review started: June 27, 2016
First decision: August 11, 2016
Revised: September 15, 2016
Accepted: October 25, 2016
Article in press: October 27, 2016
Published online: January 16, 2017

Abstract

Phase III evidence in the shape of a series of randomized controlled trials and meta-analyses has shown that laparoscopic gastrectomy is safe and gives better short-term results with respect to the traditional open technique for early-stage gastric cancer. In fact, in the East laparoscopic gastrectomy has become routine for early-stage gastric cancer. In contrast, the treatment of advanced gastric cancer through a minimally invasive way is still a debated issue, mostly due to worries about its oncological efficacy and the difficulty of carrying out an extended lymphadenectomy and intestinal reconstruction after total gastrectomy laparoscopically. Over the last ten years the introduction of robotic surgery has implied overcoming some intrinsic drawbacks found to be present in the conventional laparoscopic procedure. Robot-assisted gastrectomy with D2 lymphadenectomy has been shown to be safe and feasible for the treatment of gastric cancer patients. But unfortunately, most available studies investigating the robotic gastrectomy for gastric cancer compared to laparoscopic and open technique are so far retrospective and there have not been phase III trials. In the present review we looked at scientific evidence available today regarding the new high-tech surgical robotic approach, and we attempted to bring to light the real advantages of robot-assisted gastrectomy compared to the traditional laparoscopic and open technique for the treatment of gastric cancer.

Key Words: Gastric cancer, Gastric resection, Minimally invasive surgery, Robot-assisted gastrectomy

Core tip: Laparoscopic gastrectomy has been shown to be a viable option for early gastric cancer, showing survival rates comparable to those of open procedure. However, there has been criticism concerning the routine use of laparoscopy in patients with advanced gastric cancer, principally because it adapts poorly to complex maneuvers like D2 lymphadenectomy. Robotic surgery has been shown to make certain laparoscopic procedures easier and safer. Reports have recently shown the ever increasing feasibility and safety of robotic assisted laparoscopic gastrectomy for gastric cancer, in some cases even proving superior to traditional laparoscopy.



INTRODUCTION

In 1991, Kitano et al[1] performed the first laparoscopically assisted gastrectomy for gastric cancer. Subsequently, under the impulse of level III studies providing the evidence of the safety of laparoscopic assisted distal gastrectomy (LADG) for distal early-stage gastric cancer, several authors reported comparative studies with better short-term results in favor of this technique with respect to traditional open[2]. As a consequence laparoscopic gastrectomy (LG) has progressively spread worldwide, especially in the East, for the treatment of early gastric cancer[3,4]. On the other hand, the treatment of patients with advanced gastric cancer has always been considered difficult laparoscopically, thus techniques such as laparoscopic assisted total gastrectomy (LATG) and laparoscopic extended lymphadenectomy did not meet the same enthusiasm. As a result, the spread of laparoscopic surgery as a means of performing total gastrectomy and managing advanced gastric cancer was limited. This was mainly due to the technical difficulties and complexity of the D2 lymphadenectomy and the intestinal reconstruction after total gastrectomy[5,6].

Robot-assisted techniques have brought about improvements to certain surgical procedures, particularly those which require precise dissection, making it possible to resolve some of the innate limitations of laparoscopy. So over the years, robot-assisted gastrectomy (RAG) has become increasingly considered as a valid, yet still debatable, alternative to executing gastrectomy for gastric cancer, in particular for total gastric resection and extended lymph node dissection in advanced tumours[7-9]. We analyzed high-quality clinical trials by systematically reviewing the literature published so far in Pubmed comprehending robotic case series, as well as those studies that have compared RAG with LG and/or open gastrectomy for gastric cancer. Our intent is to verify if at present there is actual evidence of an advantage to robotic compared to laparoscopic and traditional open gastrectomy for gastric cancer.

Rational basis of robotic surgery as improvement of laparoscopy

Areas of surgery necessitating precise movements have employed Robotic technology. In 1994 the da Vinci® Surgical System (Intuitive Surgical, Sunnyvale, California, United States) gained the approval of the United States Food and Drug Administration (FDA). The da Vinci® Surgical Robotic has undergone constant improvement over recent years, and now includes additional features including near-infrared technology, and facilitated set-up. The latest generation, which was released in 2014 and is known as the da Vinci Xi™ system, is less bulky and its arms are more ergonomic (Figure 1).

Figure 1
Figure 1 New-generation da Vinci Xi™; the system is more versatile and better manoeuvrable, the robotic arms are thinner and arranged in a more ergonomic way, enabling multiquadrant procedures without repositioning the system.

Robotic surgery eliminates some of the disadvantages of conventional laparoscopy. The principal drawbacks of conventional laparoscopy from a technical standpoint are: The instability of the two-dimensional (2D) camera; instruments with limited movement which augment the physiologic tremor of the surgeon’s hand, therefore limiting manipulative actions and increasing ergonomic discomfort.

The robotic surgery system has the upper hand over laparoscopy when fine dissection is needed, eliminating the traces of physiologic human tremor, increasing dexterity through its typical internal articulated endoscopic wrist (EndoWrist™ System), and providing stereoscopic vision with 3D high-resolution images[10]. This allows surgeons to perform minimally invasive surgery with greater ease and safety, and more ergonomically. As a consequence it probably makes it possible for more surgeons to complete complex procedure in a minimally invasive fashion.

Moreover, even if laparoscopic surgery may have an effect on the robotic gastrectomy learning process, robotic surgery appears to globally need less time to master compared to a laparoscopic procedure traditionally requiring a steep learning curve[11-14].

Main drawbacks of conventional laparoscopy in gastric cancer surgery

Delicate maneuvers which necessitate excellent visualization and total precision such as intra-corporeal anastomosis and dissection of extra-perigastric lymph nodes along the major arterial structures are the principal pitfalls of conventional laparoscopic gastrectomy for gastric cancer.

The far from perfect and often shallow angulation of the traditional unergonomic laparoscopic technique render the D2 lymphadenectomy especially hard and demanding even for minimally-invasive surgeons who have been solidly trained. Areas which are quite hard to reach during laparoscopic lymphadenectomy include lymph node stations 4, 6, 9, 11p and 12a[15]. It may be linked to the risk of important blood loss which can occur particularly during the lymph node dissection around the infra pyloric area and the inferior mesenteric vein, including stations 6 and 14, and the supra pancreatic area including stations 7, 8, and 9[16]. Miura et al[15] indicated a far inferior amount of harvested lymph nodes obtained by laparoscopy in comparison to open surgery along the major gastric curvature (Nos. 4 and 6) and second tier nodes along the celiac and splenic arteries (Nos. 9 and 11). Similarly, Bouras et al[17] showed a greatly inferior amount of lymph nodes harvested along the common hepatic artery in a series of laparoscopic distal gastrectomy procedures compared to open distal gastrectomy (ODG).

Main technical advantages of robotics over traditional laparoscopy in gastric cancer

The majority of resectable gastric cancer patients are advised to undergo gastrectomy with D2 lymph node dissection surgical procedure[18]. Thus, in gastric cancer treatment, in order to fit oncological criteria, minimally invasive procedures must entail proper lymphadenectomy, as in its traditional open counterpart.

It is widely accepted that D2 lympadenectomy is one of the most difficult steps of the laparoscopic gastrectomy procedure for gastric cancer. The certain advantage produced by the robotic system could be decisive in gastric cancer surgery, mainly ensuring an extremely precise and safe lymphadenectomy with reduced risk of vessel injury[19], thus making this phase a principal indicator for the robot-assisted technique. The advantages of robotic surgery, such as tremor filtration and articulated function of wristed instruments, would be particularly suitable for enabling more complete dissection in demanding areas such as the dorsal part of the pancreas and behind splenic vessels at the hilum, which are not easily identified and are difficult to reach with current laparoscopic instruments and camera system[20]. It is extremely hard to reach the back of the suprapancreatic lymphatic area laparoscopically, and the downward compression of the pancreas which is particular prominent through the laparoscopic instruments may lead to pancreatic damage and pancreatitis. In these sites especially, the EndoWrist® robotic property and a far more stable vision allow the surgeon to complete this surgical step more easily and safely in comparison to the laparoscopic counterpart.

Robotic surgery also has the advantage of making intra-corporeal anastomosis easier, and therefore overcomes one of the greatest limitations of traditional laparoscopy from a technical standpoint in carrying out digestive restoration. This is particularly true after total gastrectomy, otherwise made possible by extracorporeal anastomosis with a small mini-laparotomy. Placing a hand-sewn purse-string suture on the esophagus is made easier by using robotic assistance, and esophageal anastomosis can subsequently be carried out by using a circular stapler, as in open surgery[7,19]. Another option would be to carry out a full robotic hand-sewn esophagojejunal anastomosis[21], possible because the robotic system gives surgeons the chance to suture more easily and with greater precision compared to laparoscopy, particularly in deep and narrow areas. Thus, increased know-how and confidence with the robotic system will enable the surgeon to perform high-precision and safer intra-corporeal sutures for patients undergoing digestive anastomosis.

LITERATURE EVIDENCE
Studies of feasibility and safety

The earliest reports of robot-assisted gastrectomy (RAG) were published in 2003 by Hashizume et al[22] and Giulianotti et al[23]. Recent reports have shown the safety and viability of robotic gastrectomy for treating gastric cancer[24,25]. Table 1 summarizes some of the robotic case series published to date[7-9,26-34]. Most of the experience so far derives from non-randomized retrospective studies, while only one available clinical trial to date has been prospectively conducted[34]. The studies mainly hail from the East. In the western countries, reports on RAG are fewer and usually limited to smaller series. In 2007, in the United States Anderson et al[7] reported the results of the first western series including 7 gastric cancer patients who were submitted to robot-assisted subtotal gastrectomy, demonstrating that robotic gastrectomy was viable, even if no direct comparison with laparoscopy was made[7].

Table 1 Robot-assisted laparoscopic gastrectomy series for treatment of gastric cancer.
Ref.CountryPatients (n)Stage diseaseResection type
Operative time1 (min ± SD)Blood loss1 (mL ± SD)Open conversion (%)Harvested nodes1 (n± SD)Morbidity (%)Mortality (%)Hospital stay1 (d ± SD)
TotalSubtotal
Anderson et al[7]United States70-I-II-7420 ± NR300 ± NR024 ± NR11.104 ± NR
Patriti et al[8]Italy13I-II-III49286 ± 32.6103 ± 87.5028.1 ± 8.37.7011.2 ± 4.3
Song et al[9]South Korea100I-II-III3367231.3 ± 43.2128.2 ± 217.5036.7 ± NR1317.8 ± 17.1
Pugliese et al[26]Italy18All stages-18344 ± 6290 ± 481225 ± 4.56610 ± 3
Lee et al[27]South Korea12I-12253.7 ± 53.0135.8 ± 133.9046.0 ± 25.58.306.6 ± 1.6
D’Annibale et al[28]Italy24I-II-III1113267.5 ± NR30 ± NR028 ± NR8.306 ± NR
Jiang et al[29]China120I-II-III3585245 ± 5070 ± 450.922.5 ± 10.7506.3 ± 2.6
Isogaki et al[30]Japan61Not reported1447520 ± 177 TG 388 ± 85 SDG150 ± 234 TG 61.8 ± 46.5 SDG043 ± 14 TG 42 ± 18 SDG4.91.613.3 ± NR
Liu et al[31]China104I-II-III5450272.52 ± 53.9180.78 ± 32.37223.1 ± 5.311.506.2 ± 2.5
Park et al[32]South Korea200All stages46154248.8 ± 55.6146.1 ± 130.3737.9 ± NR100.58.0 ± 3.7
Coratti et al[33]Itlay98All stages3860296.1 ± NR105.4 ± NR7.130.6 ± NR12.14.18.7 ± NR
Tokunaga et al[34]Japan120I12108348.5 ± NR19 ± NR2.544 ± NR14.209 ± NR

Several authors worldwide reported their experience on RAG for cancer and the largest single institution series investigating clinical and oncological outcomes so far include (Table 1): Song et al[9] in 2009, Jiang et al[29] in 2012, Liu et al[31] and Park et al[32] in 2013, Tokunaga et al[34] in 2015, which included respectively 100, 120, 104, 200 and 120 patients. These studies confirmed the safety and feasibility of RAG for cancer, essentially reporting a suitable amount of lymph nodes retrieved, but they did not furnish long-term survival data. Globally, among these various studies RAG appears to be safe in terms of the incidence and severity of postoperative complications. The morbidity rate ranges between 4.9% to 13%, with a mortality rate of 0%-6%, comparable to those of conventional gastric cancer surgery. Among reported potential advantages of the robotic procedure, Tokunaga et al[34] noted a very low incidence of intra-abdominal infectious complications (3.3%) in a large cohort of gastric cancer patients (n = 120) submitted to total or subtotal gastrectomy.

Comparative studies

Despite the existence of numerous reports regarding the safety and feasibility of RAG, only few robotic comparative analysis investigated RAG vs laparoscopic and/or open gastrectomy (Table 2)[11,12,24,25,35-50]. Most studies comparing robotic gastrectomy with open and laparoscopic surgery are retrospective case-control studies, almost all of these with sample sizes of fewer than 100 cases. Only one multi-centre comparative study was prospectively conducted: Kim et al[50], compared a total of 434 gastric cancer patients submitted to robotic and laparoscopic gastrectomy (223 vs 211 respectively), and showed similar overall complications rate with no operative mortality in either group, at the expense of significantly higher operative time and higher costs of the robotic group.

Table 2 Comparative case-control studies of robot-assisted gastrectomy vs laparoscopic assisted gastrectomy and/or open gastrectomy.
Ref.SubjectStage diseasePatients (n)
Operation time (min)1Blood loss (mL)1Harvested nodes (n)1Morbidity (%)Mortality (%)Hospital stay (d)1
RAGLAGOG
Song et al[35]RAG vs iLAG2 vs rLAG2I-II202202 202-230 vs 289.5 vs 134.1 (RAG < iLAG > rLAG)394.8 RAG vs 39.5 rLAG (NS)35.3 vs 31.5 vs 42.7 (NS)5 vs 5 vs 10 (NS)0 vs 0 vs 05.7 vs 7.7 vs 6.2 (RAG < iLAG)3 (RAG~rLAG, NS)
Kim et al[36]RAG vs LAG vs OGI-II-III161112259.2 vs 203.9 vs 126.7 (RAG > LAG > OG)330.3 vs 44.7 vs 78.8 (RAG < LAG < OG)341.1 vs 37.4 vs 43.3 (NS)0 vs 10 vs 20 (NS)0 vs 0 vs 05.1 vs 6.5 vs 6.7 (RAG < LAG < OG)3
Eom et al[37]RAG vs LAGI-II-III3062-229.1 vs 189.4 (RAG > LAG)3152.8 vs 88.3 (NS)30.2 vs 33.4 (NS)13.3 vs 6.6 (NS)0 vs 07.9 vs 7.8 (NS)
Woo et al[25]RAG vs LAGI-II-III236591-219.5 vs 170.7 (RAG > LAG)391.6 vs 147.9 (RAG < LAG)339.0 vs 37.4 (NS)11 vs 13.7 (NS)0.4 vs 0.3 (NS)7.7 vs 7.0 (RAG > LAG)3
Caruso et al[38]RAG vs OGAll stages29-120290 vs 222 (RAG > OG)3197.6 vs 386.1 (RAG < OG)328.0 vs 31.7 (RAG~OG)10.34 vs 10.04 (NS)0 vs 3.3 (NS)9.6 vs 13.4 (RAG < OG)3
Huang et al[39]RAG vs LAG vs OGI-II-III3964586430 vs 350 vs 320 (RAG > LAG > OG)350 vs 100 vs 400 (RAG < LAG < OG)332 vs 26 vs 34 (RAG = OG > LAG)315.4 vs 15.6 vs 14.7 (NS)1.4 vs 1.6 vs 2.6 (NS)7 vs 11 vs 12 (RAG < LAG < OG)3
Uyama et al[40]RAG vs LAGAll stages25225-361 vs 345 (NS)51.8 vs 81.0 (RAG < LAG)344.3 vs 43.2 (NS)11.2 vs 16.9 (NS)0 vs 012.1 vs 17.3 (RAG < LAG)3
Kang et al[12]RAG vs LAGI-II-III100282-202.05 vs 173.45 (RAG > LAG)393.25 vs 173.45 (RAG < LAG)3NR14.0 vs 10.3 (NS)0 vs 09.81 vs 8.11 (RAG > LAG)3
Kim et al[41]RAG vs LAG vs OG0-I-II-III4368614542226 vs 176 vs 158 (RAG > LAG > OG)385 vs 112 vs 192 (RAG = LAG < OG)340.2 vs 37.6 vs 40.5 (RAG = OG > LAG)310.1 vs 10.4 vs 10.7 (NS)0.5 vs 0.3 vs 0.5 (NS)7.5 vs 7.8 vs 10.2 (RAG = LAG < OG)3
Yoon et al[42]RAG vs LAGI-II-III3665-305.8 vs 210.2 (RAG > LAG)3NR42.8 vs 39.4 (NS)16.7 vs 15.4 (NS)0 vs 08.8 vs 10.3 (NS)
Hyun et al[43]RAG vs LAGI-II-III3883-234.4 vs 220.0 (NS)131.3 vs 130.48 (NS)32.8 vs 32.8 (NS)13.14vs 16.84 (NS)0 vs 010.5 vs 11.9 (NS)
Kim et al[11]RAG vs LAGI-II-III172481-206.4 vs 167.1 (RAG > LAG)359.8 vs 134.9 (RAG < OG)337.3 vs 36.8 (NS)5.2 vs 4.2 (NS)0 vs 0.6 (NS)7.1 vs 6.7 (NS)
Kim et al[44]RAG vs LAGI-II-III87288-248.4 vs 230.0 (RAG > LAG)3NR37.1 vs 34.1 (RAG > LAG)35.7 vs 9.0 (RAG < LAG)31.1 vs 0.3 (NS)6.7 vs 7.4 (RAG < LAG)3
Son et al[45]RAG vs LAGI-II-III5158-264.1 vs 210.3 (RAG > LAG)3163.4 vs 210.7 (NS)47.2 vs 42.8 (NS)16 vs 22 (NS)1.9 vs 0 (NS)8.6 vs 7.9 (NS)
Park et al[46]RAG vs LAGI-II-III30120-218 vs 140 (RAG > LAG)375 vs 60 (NS)34 vs 35 (NS)17 vs 7.5 (NS)0 vs 07.0 vs 7.0 (NS)
Junfeng et al[24]RAG vs LAGI-II-III120394-234.8 vs 221.3 (RAG > LAG)3118.3 vs 137.6 (RAG < LAG)334.6 vs 32.7 (RAG > LAG)35.8 vs 4.3 (NS)NR7.8 vs 7.9 (NS)
Seo et al[47]RAG vs LAGI-II-III4040-243 vs 224 (NS)76 vs 227 (RAG < LAG)340.4 vs 35.4 (NS)NRNR6.75 vs 7.37 (RAG < LAG)3
Shen et al[48]RAG vs LAGI-II-III93330-257.1 vs 226.2 (RAG > LAG)3176.6 vs 212.5 (RAG < LAG)333.0 vs 31.3 (RAG > LAG)39.8 vs 10.0 (NS)NR9.4 vs 10.6 (NS)
Suda et al[49]RAG vs LAGAll stages88438-381 vs 361 (RAG > LAG)346 vs 34 (RAG > LAG)340 vs 38 (NS)2.3 vs 11.4 (RAG < LAG)31.1 vs 0.2 (NS)14 vs 15 (RAG < LAG)3
Kim et al[50]RAG vs LAGI-II-III223211-226 vs 180 (RAG > LAG)350 vs 60 (NS)33 vs 32 (NS)13.5 vs 14.2 (NS)0 vs 07.8 vs 7.9 (NS)

However, initial outcome demonstrated comparable or superior short-term results of RAG than the results achieved by open and laparoscopic procedures, at the price of generally longer operation time, as well as higher cost. The prolonged operation time is attributable also to the additional time docking the robotic system, however that time decreases gradually as the expertise of the team increases, and robotic devices are upgraded[9]. Multiple series have reported various ranges in morbidity (5%-17%) after RAG (Table 2). Essentially, outcomes shown in these studies are satisfactory and similar to those of traditional surgical procedures (Table 2). Aforementioned outcomes demonstrate the clinical feasibility in using robotic radical gastrectomy for gastric adenocarcinoma in comparison with the conventional open and traditional minimally invasive laparoscopic approach, in some cases with potential clinical advantages also. For example, Kim et al[44] and Suda et al[49] showed a statistically significant improvement of the postoperative morbidity rate in gastric cancer patients submitted to RAG compared to LAG. In particular, Suda et al[49] noted that local (particularly pancreatic fistula, robotic 0% vs conventional laparoscopy 4.3%, P = 0.029) rather than systemic complication rates were attenuated using the surgical robot. Also Seo et al[47] reported an advantages of RAG in comparison to LAG in terms of a reduction of the incidence of postoperative pancreatitis or pancreatic fistula, which has been attributed to what is assumed to be a more gentle and steady pancreatic compression through the robotic system compared to laparoscopy during the suprapancreatic lymph nodes dissection.

For the first time Kim et al[36] reported the results achieved with robotic surgery with respect to laparoscopic and open gastrectomy for the treatment of early gastric cancer. They compared 16 patients who underwent robotic procedure with 11 and 12 laparoscopic and open gastrectomy respectively, revealing longer operative times of the robotic group, but less bleeding and reduced length of hospital stay. With regards to number of harvested lymph nodes and post-operative outcomes amongst the groups no difference was demonstrated.

The biggest (not meta-analyzed) comparative study so far was carried out by Kim et al[41]. They retrospectively looked at data on surgical complications of 5839 gastric cancer patients (4542 open, 861 laparoscopic and 436 robotic gastrectomies), and found no significant differences between the three groups with regards to post-operative complication and morbidity.

In another large single institute comparative study[25] the authors made a comparison between 236 patients who had undergone robotic curative resection of gastric cancer and 591 laparoscopic surgery patients (Table 2). The authors revealed a statistical significance difference, the mean duration of surgery was 49 min longer in the robotic group, whereas blood loss was 56.3 mL less. Morbidity, mortality and number of lymph nodes retrieved per level were comparable.

In yet another large comparative study (39 patients with gastric cancer undergoing robotic, 586 open and 64 laparoscopic gastrectomies)[39], RAG was linked to diminished bleeding and reduced hospital stay, but with longer operative time than was necessary for both open and laparoscopic gastrectomy. The amount of harvested lymph nodes was also similar between the open and robotic groups, but less in the laparoscopic group (Table 2). The authors especially underlined that robotic instruments made it a great deal more simple to carry out the lymph node dissection, rather than the conventional laparoscopic approach, more so in the infra-pyloric and supra-pancreatic stations.

Junfeng et al[24] retrospectively compared 120 vs 394 gastric cancer patients who had undergone RAG and laparoscopic assisted gastrectomy (LAG) respectively, revealing similar results. However, it is interesting to note that the authors showed, in addition to once more less intra operative bleeding and longer RAG operative time compared to the laparoscopic counterpart, that the numbers of harvested lymph nodes were notably superior in the RAG group at tier 2. In the same way, Kim et al[44] commented that, with regard to their experience achieved on 87 gastric cancer patients who had undergone robot-assisted distal gastrectomy (RADG) compared to 288 submitted to LADG, RADG seemed to be advantageous over LADG in performing the dissection of the second level lymph nodes, in particular those located in the suprapancreatic space and those around the splenic artery. Also Son’s et al[45] showed that robotic gastric surgery gave a much larger amount of harvested lymph nodes around splenic vessels in comparison to lymph nodes retrieved during laparoscopic procedure. This current medical research evidence, albeit initial, seems to consolidate the advantage of robotic surgery over LAG in its ability to perform a more complete D2 lymphadenectomy, probably making it possible to overcome one of the greatest surgical drawbacks of the laparoscopy in the treatment of gastric cancer.

An advantage of RAG compared to LAG has been reported in terms of a reduction of the incidence of postoperative pancreatitis or pancreatic fistula. This has been attributed to what is assumed to be a more gentle and constant pancreatic compression obtained using the robotic system compared to laparoscopy during the suprapancreatic lymph nodes dissection, i.e., at station 9 and 11[47].

Review and meta-analysis studies

To date, several review articles[10,19,51-55] have been published which provide a critical appraisal of the effectiveness of RAG for gastric cancer, but they are not systematic research and do not actually supply any statistical comparative analysis. Thus, the usefulness of these articles is essentially of scientific expounding and debating, they do not add any new knowledge to that so far evidenced by clinical studies.

On the other hand, 9 meta-analysis[20,56-63] conducted using a systematic method have been published to date in literature trying to focus on RAG utility in treating gastric cancer (Table 3). One meta-analysis included certain reports which compared RAG to OG[57]; 5 meta-analyses utilized high quality studies which compared RAG and LG[56,59-61,63]; and the remaining 3 meta-analyses contained a systematic review and meta-analysis of studies investigating short-term results of RAG vs LG and OG[20,58,62]. Exclusively prospective and retrospective studies were included in these meta-analysis, while no randomized controlled trials (RCTs) were found. The aforementioned meta-analysis showed that the RAG short-term clinical results were basically to be compared to LG and OG results. In terms of bleeding in particular, RAG was superior to both LG and OG, in spite of longer operation time. In addition RAG and LG groups did not show differences with regards to the number of harvested lymph nodes and conversion to open rates; RAG comported slightly inferior hospital stay or similar to that for LAG, but much less than OG; complications occurring after the operation were similar for all three operating methods.

Table 3 Meta-analysis comparing robot-assisted gastrectomy with laparoscopic assisted gastrectomy and/or open gastrectomy in the treatment gastric cancer.
Ref.SubjectPatients (n)
Operation time (min)1Blood loss (mL)1Harvested nodes (n)1Morbidity (%)Mortality (%)Hospital stay (d)1
RAGLAGOG
Xiong et al[56]RAG vs LAG268650-68.772 (RAG > LAG)3-41.882 (RAG < LAG)3-0.712 (NS)0.744 (NS)1.804 (NS)-0.542 (NS)
Liao et al[57]RAG vs OG520-526065.732 (RAG > LAG)3-126.082 (RAG < LAG)3-0.782 (NS)0.984 (NS)0.984 (NS)-2.872 (RAG < LAG)3
Hyun et al[58]RAG vs LAG RAG vs OG634 5581236 -- 530161.992 (RAG > LAG)3 65.732 (RAG > OG)3-6.082 (NS) -154.182 (RAG < OG)3-0.252 (NS) -1.132 (NS)1.124 (NS) 1.374 (NS)NR NR-0.602 (NS) -2.182 (RAG < OG)3
Marano et al[20]RAG vs OG RAG vs LAG404 404- 845718 -95.832 (RAG > OG)3 63.702 (RAG > LAG)3-225.582 (NS) -35.532 (RAG < LAG)3-2.682 (NS) 0.502 (NS)0.934 (NS) 0.874 (NS)NR NR-2.922 (RAG < OG)3 -0.602 (NS)
Xiong et al[59]RAG vs LAG7361759-48.642 (RAG > LAG)3-33.562 (RAG < LAG)31.282 (NS)1.134 (NS)1.664 (NS)-1.162 (NS)
Liao et al[60]RAG vs LAG7621473-50.02 (RAG > LAG)3-46.972 (RAG < LAG)31.612 (NS)0.884 (NS)0.454 (NS)-0.52 (NS)
Shen et al[61]RAG vs LAG5061369-48.462 (RAG > LAG)3-38.432 (RAG < LAG)31.062 (NS)0.954 (NS)NR-1.02 (NS)
Zong et al[62]RAG vs OG RAG vs LAG481 997- 22074674 -68.472 (RAG > OG)3 57.152 (RAG > LAG)3-106.632 (RAG < OG)3 -28.592 (NS)-0.782 (NS) -0.632 (NS)0.924 (NS) 1.064 (NS)0.724 (NS) 1.054 (NS)-2.492 (RAG < OG)3 -0.162 (NS)
Chuan et al[63]RAG vs LAG5511245-42.92 (RAG > LAG)3-16.072 (RAG < LAG)32.452 (NS)1.054 (NS)NR-1.982 (RAG < LAG)3

Robotic surgery lasts longer mainly because of the additional set-up and docking-time necessary for the robotic system. However, it must be said that operating time noticeably diminished as surgical experience in robotic gastrectomy increased[9,32,46]. Moreover, there are major limits to how these meta-analysis are interpreted. All data came from non-randomized controlled trials, and the included studies are essentially limited in number and with small sample sizes. Moreover, significant heterogeneity exists among the included studies deriving from several factors, such as different surgeon skill levels, different types of gastrectomy, different extent of lymph node dissection, different tumour stage, different rate of adjuvant treatment, and different protocols of post-operative management and discharge of patients. Thus, the overall level of clinical evidence of this pooled data was low and, since there have been no randomized comparative studies, even if a meta-analysis is performed, it seems difficult to reach a clear conclusion.

Long term outcome

At the present time, long-term benefits of RAG for the treatment of gastric cancer are under reported in literature. Pugliese et al[26] are among the few who have reported long term results in their minimally invasive surgical experience in gastric cancer patients. Among a cohort-case study of 70 patients who underwent minimally invasive subtotal gastrectomy with D2 lymphadenectomy, the authors included also 18 patients submitted to the robotic procedure. The authors did not provide data specifically referred to the robotic group only, however, always on the basis of analogous short-term results between groups undergoing laparoscopic and robotic procedures, the reported 5-year survival was 81% for the whole cohort. Coratti et al[33] were the first to report long-term survival data specifically referring to gastric cancer patients submitted to robot-assisted gastrectomies. They analyzed survival results in a group of 98 patients with either early and advanced gastric cancer submitted to RAG. In a mean follow-up of 46.9 mo, they registered a cumulative 5-year survival rate of 73.3%. Son et al[45] carried out the longest follow-up study till now available. They evaluated the survival rates in a cohort-study group of 51 gastric cancer patients submitted to robotic total gastrectomy with D2 lymph nodes dissection and compared it to 58 patients who underwent analogous surgery but through the laparoscopic approach. In a median long-term follow-up of 70 mo, the authors did not find significant differences in overall survival and disease-free survival between the two groups. Specifically, the authors reported a 5-year overall survival rate of 89.5% for the robotic group, which was not statistically significant different with respect to the rate revealed in the laparoscopic group (91.1%).

The aforementioned results are comforting, but it must be said that the case studies were limited, and selection bias is a real worry as it was a non-randomized study design. Follow-up periods longer than 5 years are needed to show oncological results, and so further RCTs are required in order to validate definitive conclusions.

DISCUSSION

The relative new technological advance in surgery through the introduction of minimally invasive technique can be accepted as an alternative to open surgery, which usually confers better short-term post-operative results, only if the oncologic parameters are as sufficiently respected as for the traditional open approach. Obviously, at the same time the long-term survival rates should not be adversely affected either.

With specific reference to gastric cancer one of the most important oncological criterion is the quality of lymphadenectomy, thus in order for laparoscopic or robot-assisted laparoscopic gastric surgery to be considered adequate, at least the same extent of lymph node dissection as in traditional surgery should be achieved, and moreover favorable postoperative results should also be evident.

Over the last two decades LG with lymph node dissection has developed as minimally invasive surgery for gastric cancer and it has been principally applied to early gastric cancer. Certain RCTs and meta-analysis showed that laparoscopic gastrectomy did not have inferior oncologic results compared to open surgery for early-stage gastric cancer, with instead improved results in the short term[3,64,65]. In fact, laparoscopic extended D1 lymphadenectomy may be seen as sufficient for almost all early gastric cancer in which lymph node metastases rarely occur, and is today the recommended approach in the East. On the other hand, only few high quality reports investigating the oncological adequacy of laparoscopic minimally invasive techniques for advanced gastric cancer are available to date. Recently, some meta-analyses related to this have been published, but there have been contrasting outcomes, particularly regarding complications after total gastrectomy and the actual adequacy of D2 lymphadenectomy in patients affected by advanced-stage of gastric cancer[4,64,66-69]. Even though a complete LG and extended lymph nodes dissection has been demonstrated by several experts to be feasible laparoscopically[5,6,26,70], due to some intrinsic limiting drawbacks of the laparoscopic technique, important oncologic preoccupations have been raised. When in the meta-analysis studies data not restricted to LADG solely for early gastric cancer was considered, but instead included advanced-stage tumour too, it was not possible to guarantee the same amount of lymph node dissection as in conventional surgical procedures[71,72]. Thus, the laparoscopic techniques cannot be considered a standard validated procedure for all gastric cancer sufferers.

Certain inherent drawbacks of conventional laparoscopy may be eliminated by robotics by increasing the use of minimally invasive procedures, especially when more extended lymph nodes dissection and complicated reconstruction are required. In light of this, the introduction of robotic technologies could lead to the improvement of health care and final results. Particularly during typical difficult maneuvers in laparocopy, such as the dissection of the lymphatic tissue around major abdominal vessels (gastric, gastroepiploic, common hepatic, and celiac artery lymph nodes), robotics offers some indisputable advantages, which make it possible to perform the dissection more safely and easily. Consequently, robotic techniques should be viewed more as a technical advancement and auxiliary tool of the traditional minimally invasive laparoscopic approach, rather than an independent device system.

Most surgeons who are experts in robotics reported in their experience amounts of retrieved lymph nodes during RAG similar to those obtainable by the classic open counterpart procedure and sometimes more than those achieved by laparoscopy[8,20,38,56-63]. However, it must be said that the explanation of available comparable data among RAG, LG and OG has notable limitations. The principal issue that could affect the interpretation of these data is essentially the lack of a comprehensive comparative RCT. However, we have also to consider that the number of published high quality observational and retrospective studies is limited, and globally the sample sizes in each singular trial is poor. Ultimately, but not less importantly from the point of view of oncological adequacy, the duration of follow up is almost always limited.

CONCLUSION

RAG appears to be a safe and feasible alternative to conventional open or laparoscopic gastrectomy for the treatment of early stage gastric carcinoma, having demonstrated satisfactory perioperative outcomes and oncological adequacy. The number of collected lymph nodes when comparing RAG to open and laparoscopic gastrectomy are essentially similar when considering early-stage gastric cancer only, while an advantageous lower blood loss estimation was revealed in comparison with the other two approaches.

Basically the robotic system simplifies certain hard conventional laparoscopy techniques and renders them safer, in addition simultaneously possessing a learning curve and reproducibility that appear to be briefer than conventional laparoscopy[11-14]. These results, albeit initial, are promising, but the superiority of robotic gastric surgery over the traditional laparoscopic approach has not yet been solidly proved and its validation is still a long way off for all gastric cancer patients. The main controversial issue regards the possibility of demonstrating that the supposed superiority of RAG with respect to laparoscopy in carrying out a more adequate extended lymphadenectomy could lead to potential oncological benefit, probably true in gastric cancer of a more advanced stage.

Unfortunately, due to inadequate long-term follow-up results and a limited number of studies to date available, larger and randomized prospective trials are required to draw definitive conclusion.

Footnotes

Manuscript source: Invited manuscript

Specialty type: Gastroenterology and hepatology

Country of origin: Italy

Peer-review report classification

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P- Reviewer: Aoyagi K, Arigami T, Jonaitis L, Terashima M, Zhu YL S- Editor: Qiu S L- Editor: A E- Editor: Lu YJ

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