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Biorobotics in Medicine
BIOROBOTICS IN MEDICINE
Edited by: ShivSanjeevi Sripathi
ARCLER
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www.arclerpress.com
Biorobotics in Medicine ShivSanjeevi Sripathi
Arcler Press 224 Shoreacres Road Burlington, ON L7L 2H2 Canada www.arclerpress.com Email: [email protected] e-book Edition 2023 ISBN: 978-1-77469-567-8 (e-book) This book contains information obtained from highly regarded resources. Reprinted material sources are indicated. Copyright for individual articles remains with the authors as indicated and published under Creative Commons License. A Wide variety of references are listed. Reasonable efforts have been made to publish reliable data and views articulated in the chapters are those of the individual contributors, and not necessarily those of the editors or publishers. Editors or publishers are not responsible for the accuracy of the information in the published chapters or consequences of their use. The publisher assumes no responsibility for any damage or grievance to the persons or property arising out of the use of any materials, instructions, methods or thoughts in the book. The editors and the publisher have attempted to trace the copyright holders of all material reproduced in this publication and apologize to copyright holders if permission has not been obtained. If any copyright holder has not been acknowledged, please write to us so we may rectify. Notice: Registered trademark of products or corporate names are used only for explanation and identification without intent of infringement. © 2023 Arcler Press ISBN: 978-1-77469-408-4 (Hardcover) Arcler Press publishes wide variety of books and eBooks. For more information about Arcler Press and its products, visit our website at www.arclerpress.com
DECLARATION Some content or chapters in this book are open access copyright free published research work, which is published under Creative Commons License and are indicated with the citation. We are thankful to the publishers and authors of the content and chapters as without them this book wouldn’t have been possible.
ABOUT THE EDITOR
ShivSanjeevi Sripathi completed his Masters in Biotechnology from Mumbai University in 2008. He was awarded for academic excellence in both his Bachelors and Masters for securing second rank in Mumbai University in 2006 and first rank in his college: Kishinchand chellaram College. For his Masters he secured first rank in his college KET’s V.G.Vaze College. He qualified CSIR and NET and and TOEFL in September 2008. He then worked on a stem cell project at the Specialized Centre for Cell Based Therapy (SCCT),KEM Hospital at Mumbai on a project entitled, : Isolation & detection of stem cells from Human Umbilical cord/ amniotic membrane” following which he worked at Junior Research Fellow at Microbiology & Cell Biology Department, Indian Institute of Science, Bangalore on cloning of cell wall genes and transcription factors in E.coli & M.smegmatis. As a writer, he has authored and co-authored 35 books on various aspects of biology such as bionics, molecular wires, cloning, hypertension, the epidemics of the 21st century, handling depression, camouflage, hygiene, immunology and many more with international publishers. He loves to read and share on interesting aspects of life sciences in books. In his free time he loves to travel and explore and give talks on spirituality, ancient customs and traditions.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
List of Contributors.......................................................................................xiii
List of Abbreviations.................................................................................... xvii
Preface..................................................................................................... ....xxi Chapter 1
Biorobotics in Medicine: A Snapshot.......................................................... 1 1.1 Altering Healthcare............................................................................... 2 1.2 Case Study: Robotic Surgery for Neurosurgery...................................... 5 1.3 Covid-19 and Other Aspects................................................................. 7 1.4 References............................................................................................ 9
Chapter 2
Robots for Surgery................................................................................... 11 2.1 A Snapshot......................................................................................... 12 2.2 Trends................................................................................................. 15 2.3 Case Study: Open Esophagectomy for Esophageal Cancer: Robot-Assisted Vs. Video-Assisted.................................................... 33 2.4 Case Study: Robots For Total Mesorectal Excision (Tme):..................... 38 2.5 Final Points......................................................................................... 41 2.6 References.......................................................................................... 43
Chapter 3
Robots for Surgery Continued.................................................................. 45 3.1 Robotic Systems.................................................................................. 46 3.2 Feasibility of Robotic Surgery for Colorectal Cancer (CRC).................. 54 3.3 Maxillofacial Surgery: What is the Status?........................................... 60 3.4 Robots for Pediatric Surgery: Few Studies:........................................... 62 3.5 Hernia Repairs: A Comparison............................................................ 68 3.6 The Hope for Cerebral Palsy (CP)........................................................ 70 3.7 Final Points......................................................................................... 72 3.8 References.......................................................................................... 75
Chapter 4
Nanobiorobotics...................................................................................... 77 4.1 Concepts............................................................................................ 78 4.2 Case Studies....................................................................................... 80 4.3 References.......................................................................................... 86
Chapter 5
A Brief Review on Challenges in Design and Development of Nanorobots for Medical Applications.................................................. 87 Abstract.................................................................................................... 87 Introduction.............................................................................................. 88 Challenges in the Design and Development of Nanorobots...................... 90 Challenges in the Application of Nanorobots.......................................... 110 Biocompatibility and Toxicity of Nanorobots.......................................... 115 Conclusions............................................................................................ 116 Author Contributions.............................................................................. 117 References.............................................................................................. 118
Chapter 6
Robotic Applications in Orthodontics: Changing the Face of Contemporary Clinical Care.............................................................. 129 Abstract.................................................................................................. 129 Introduction............................................................................................ 130 Methodology.......................................................................................... 133 Results.................................................................................................... 137 Discussion.............................................................................................. 145 Orthodontic Applications of Robotics: Crystal Gazing Into the Future!... 150 Conclusions............................................................................................ 151 References.............................................................................................. 152
Chapter 7
Current Advances in Robotics for Head and Neck Surgery—A Systematic Review............................................................... 169 Simple Summary..................................................................................... 169 Abstract.................................................................................................. 170 Introduction............................................................................................ 170 Methods................................................................................................. 172 Results.................................................................................................... 174 Conclusions............................................................................................ 189 Author Contributions.............................................................................. 190 References.............................................................................................. 191 x
Chapter 8
Gait Training Using a Robotic Hip Exoskeleton Improves Metabolic Gait Efficiency in the Elderly................................................. 199 Abstract.................................................................................................. 199 Introduction............................................................................................ 200 Results.................................................................................................... 202 Discussion.............................................................................................. 206 Materials and Methods........................................................................... 212 Acknowledgements................................................................................ 219 Author Contributions.............................................................................. 219 References.............................................................................................. 220
Chapter 9
Recent Advances in Design and Actuation of Continuum Robots for Medical Applications........................................................................ 227 Abstract.................................................................................................. 227 Introduction............................................................................................ 228 Continuum Robots Inspiration and Design.............................................. 229 Actuation Methods for Continuum Robot................................................ 246 Future Research Challenges and Conclusions......................................... 257 Conclusions............................................................................................ 260 Author Contributions.............................................................................. 261 References.............................................................................................. 262
Chapter 10 Evolving from Laboratory Toys towards Life-Savers: Small-Scale Magnetic Robotic Systems with Medical Imaging Modalities................................................................... 275 Abstract.................................................................................................. 275 Introduction............................................................................................ 276 Conventional Imaging Setup for Small-Scale Magnetic Robots................ 278 Medical Imaging Modalities.................................................................... 281 Integrating Medical Imaging Modalities in Small-Scale Magnetic Robots........................................................................... 282 Outlook.................................................................................................. 293 References.............................................................................................. 295 Index...................................................................................................... 305
xi
LIST OF CONTRIBUTORS
Shiv Sanjeevi Sripathi Gautham Giri Department of Mechanical and Industrial Engineering, Ryerson University, Toronto, ON M5B 2K3, Canada Yaser Maddahi Department of Research and Development, Tactile Robotics, Winnipeg, MB R3T 6A8, Canada Kourosh Zareinia Department of Mechanical and Industrial Engineering, Ryerson University, Toronto, ON M5B 2K3, Canada Samar Adel Faculty of Dentistry, Alexandria University, Alexandria, Egypt Abbas Zaher Faculty of Dentistry, Alexandria University, Alexandria, Egypt Nadia El Harouni Faculty of Dentistry, Alexandria University, Alexandria, Egypt Adith Venugopal Department of Orthodontics, Saveetha Dental College and Hospitals, Saveetha Institute of Medical and Technical Sciences, Saveetha University, Chennai, India Department of Orthodontics, University of Puthisastra, Phnom Penh, Cambodia Pratik Premjani Swami Vivekananda Subharati University, Meerut, India Nikhilesh Vaid European University College, DHCC, Dubai, UAE
Felix Boehm Department of Otorhinolaryngology, Head and Neck Surgery, Ulm University Medical Center, 89075 Ulm, Germany Surgical Oncology Ulm, i2SOUL Consortium, 89075 Ulm, Germany Rene Graesslin Department of Otorhinolaryngology, Head and Neck Surgery, Ulm University Medical Center, 89075 Ulm, Germany Surgical Oncology Ulm, i2SOUL Consortium, 89075 Ulm, Germany Marie-Nicole Theodoraki Department of Otorhinolaryngology, Head and Neck Surgery, Ulm University Medical Center, 89075 Ulm, Germany Surgical Oncology Ulm, i2SOUL Consortium, 89075 Ulm, Germany Leon Schild Department of Otorhinolaryngology, Head and Neck Surgery, Ulm University Medical Center, 89075 Ulm, Germany Surgical Oncology Ulm, i2SOUL Consortium, 89075 Ulm, Germany Jens Greve Department of Otorhinolaryngology, Head and Neck Surgery, Ulm University Medical Center, 89075 Ulm, Germany Surgical Oncology Ulm, i2SOUL Consortium, 89075 Ulm, Germany Thomas K. Hoffmann Department of Otorhinolaryngology, Head and Neck Surgery, Ulm University Medical Center, 89075 Ulm, Germany Surgical Oncology Ulm, i2SOUL Consortium, 89075 Ulm, Germany Patrick J. Schuler Department of Otorhinolaryngology, Head and Neck Surgery, Ulm University Medical Center, 89075 Ulm, Germany Surgical Oncology Ulm, i2SOUL Consortium, 89075 Ulm, Germany Elena Martini The BioRobotics Institute, Scuola Superiore Sant’Anna, Pisa, Italy Simona Crea The BioRobotics Institute, Scuola Superiore Sant’Anna, Pisa, Italy Fondazione Don Carlo Gnocchi, Milan, Italy Andrea Parri The BioRobotics Institute, Scuola Superiore Sant’Anna, Pisa, Italy xiv
Luca Bastiani Institute of Clinical Physiology, National Research Council, Pisa, Italy Ugo Faraguna Institute of Clinical Physiology, National Research Council, Pisa, Italy Zach McKinney The BioRobotics Institute, Scuola Superiore Sant’Anna, Pisa, Italy Raffaello Molino-Lova Fondazione Don Carlo Gnocchi, Milan, Italy Lorenza Pratali Institute of Clinical Physiology, National Research Council, Pisa, Italy Nicola Vitiello The BioRobotics Institute, Scuola Superiore Sant’Anna, Pisa, Italy Fondazione Don Carlo Gnocchi, Milan, Italy Yong Zhong Shien-Ming Wu School of Intelligent Engineering, South China University of Technology, Guangzhou 511442, China Luohua Hu Shien-Ming Wu School of Intelligent Engineering, South China University of Technology, Guangzhou 511442, China Yinsheng Xu Shien-Ming Wu School of Intelligent Engineering, South China University of Technology, Guangzhou 511442, China Jiachen Zhang Department of Biomedical Engineering, City University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong, China
xv
LIST OF ABBREVIATIONS APO
Active Pelvis Orthosis
ATP
Adenosine triphosphate
AI
Artificial intelligence
AT
Assisted Technology
AESOP
Automated Endoscopic System for Optimal Positioning
BiCMOS
Bipolar Complementary metal-oxide-semiconductor
CNTs
Carbon Nano Tubes
CMOS
Complementary metal-oxide-semiconductor
CT
Computed tomography
CR
Continuum robot
COS
Core outcome sets
DOF
Degrees-of-freedom
DLW
Direct laser writing
DFS
Disease-free survival
DCM
Dual continuum mechanism
ETPP
Effective target protrusive position
EAP
Electro-active Polymer
ERF
Electro-rheological fluid
EMADIS
Endoscopy-assisted magnetic actuation with dual imaging system
EBL
Estimated blood loss
FES
Finite Element Simulations
FMSMs
Fluorescence magnetic spore-based microrobots
FTL
Follow-the-leader
GC
Gait cycle
GLAD
Glancing angle deposition
IC
Integrated Circuit
LOS
Length of stay
LCEs
Liquid-crystal elastomers
LCN
Liquid crystal network
LMPA
Low Melting Point Alloy
LN
Lymph nodes
ML
Machine learning
MRI
Magnetic resonance imaging
MVSMs
Mechanism-based variable stiffness methods
MCoT
Metabolic Cost of Transport
METs
Metabolic equivalents
MOSFET
Metal–Oxide–Semiconductor Field-Effect Transistor
MSQC
Michigan Surgical Quality Collaborative
MIS
Minimally invasive surgery
NEMS
Nanoelectromechanical systems
NBI
Narrow-band imaging
NOTES
Natural Orifice Transluminal Endoscopic Surgery
NIRF
Near-infrared fluorescence
NIR
Near-infrared radiation
OSA
Obstructive sleep apnea
OSAS
Obstructive sleep apnea syndrome
OTC
Optical coherence tomography
PASE
Physical Activity Scale for the Elderly
PAD
Precision-aiming device
RF
Radio frequency
ROM
Range of motion
RLN
Recurrent laryngeal nerve
RCMP
Remotely controlled mandibular positioner
RAGT
Robot-assisted gait training
RAS
Robot-assisted surgery
RALP
Robotic-assisted laparoscopic pyeloplasty
RAR
Robotic-assisted repair
RAS
Robotic-assisted surgery
SMA
Shape Memory Alloy
SMP
Shape Memory Polymer
SPL
Single Port Laparoscopy
SWNT
Single-Wall NanoTube xviii
SCI
Spinal cord injury
SOR
Standard open repair
TP
Thermoplastic Polymer
TME
Total mesorectal excision
TLM
Transoral laser microsurgery
TORS
Transoral robot-assisted surgery
VHDL
Very High Speed Integrated Circuit Hardware Description Language
VAMIE
Video-assisted minimally invasive esophagectomy
VPL
Virus protein linear
WHO
World Health Organization
xix
PREFACE
The play Rossom’s Universal Robots written by Czech playwright Karel Capek (1921) was where the word “robot” (robota, meaning forced labor) was born. We have a slew of books and movies whose concepts based on robots range from funny to scary and hopeful. The robots employed today are seeing great progress in terms of their processing and artificial intelligence (AI). Their use has been probed in several unchartered areas like deep-sea exploration, working in dangerous zones and microprocessor assembly for computers. In the field of medicine, their use and entry have been slower. “Whether we are based on carbon or on silicon makes no fundamental difference; we should each be treated with appropriate respect.” ‒ Arthur C. Clarke, ‘2010: Odyssey Two’.
This book presents research-backed examples of how robots are being employed to assist healthcare procedures. This becomes pertinent with repeated pandemic outbreaks. The COVID-19 pandemic has necessitated “social distancing” with robust sterilization and cleaning procedures: robots have been probed in these aspects. For example, Swingobot 2000 from Taski looks at autonomous cleaning and eXtremeDisinfection roBOT (XDBOT) from researchers at Nanyang Technological University (NTU), Singapore is controlled wirelessly and can clean switches and under the beds making it a fit for cleaning hospitals. As far as social distancing is concerned the COVID-robot (Sathyamoorthy et al, arXiv, 2020) monitors the “6 feet distance”. Robots have also been developed for oropharyngeal swab testing. While more research is warranted to corroborate the logistics, cost and safety aspects for large-scale use of these robots, the idea and initial research hold promise. The book starts with examples of robots in healthcare followed by two chapters on surgical robots or case studies and examples of the potential of these machines in surgery. The discovery of something of small proportions such as the “microscope” paved the way for the vast field of microbiology. Similarly, the concepts of nano and micro have been extended to robots with the development of “nanobots”. Research is ongoing in this field aimed at employing these robots to target specific cells or deliver appropriate cargo to alter the face of drug delivery. While the field looks exciting, there are points that warrant deep analyses: one is the cost entailed of these robots that has been reported by many research teams and the second is the ethical aspects. While we have seen reports of robots greeting patients and recording their temperature, there are questions like “can they accidentally harm us”? Further, whether the ailing and the elderly would be comfortable with a “digital” doctor
or system given that most humans yearn for other human connections is another aspect that still remains unclear. The impact of robots in medical science cannot be ignored: perhaps appropriate usage and realizing that these instruments are aimed at assisting doctors and surgeons and not replacing them. “Don’t think of robots as replacements for humans -- think of them as things that will help make us better at tackling many of the problems we face” -EOIN TREACY
CHAPTER
1
Biorobotics in Medicine: A Snapshot
“By using human ova and hormone control, one can grow human flesh and skin over a skeleton of porous silicone plastics that would defy external examination.” – Dr. Alfred Lanning, ‘I, Robot’.
Contents 1.1 Altering Healthcare............................................................................... 2 1.2 Case Study: Robotic Surgery for Neurosurgery...................................... 5 1.3 Covid-19 and Other Aspects................................................................. 7 1.4 References............................................................................................ 9
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1.1 ALTERING HEALTHCARE “Clocks, artificial fountains, mills, and other such machines which, although only man-made, have the power to move of their own accord in many different ways” (Descartes, 1664/1985)-this line summarizes the concept of automation in biology. The use of robots in life sciences has long captured researchers. To illustrate this, Holland and team (2021) reviewed the use of robots in telehealth that is documented in table 1.1 below (Holland J, Kingston L, McCarthy C, Armstrong E, O’Dwyer P, Merz F, McConnell M, 2021: © 2021 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license: http://creativecommons. org/licenses/by/4.0/): Application
Ref.
Year of Make Dev.
Robot Name
Service Area
Specifications
Patient Monitoring
[56]
2016
Academic / Research based
iWard
remote physical condition monitoring for patients.
RGB camera, 3D laser sensor, 3D sensor for object detection, and EQ01 sensor unit with monitoring belt and sensor electronics module.
[57]
2014
Academic/ Research based
Carebot
Screening of patients in healthcare facilities and measuring vital signs.
Based on Yujin Robot’s Charlie [58]: 120 cm tall. Tiltable touch screen, microphones, ultrasonic sensors, bumper sensors, and a laser range finder.
[59]
2017
Academic/ Research based
Telemedical Assistant
Record patient’s vitals, dispense medications and act as a virtual presence to communicate with physicians/family.
HD camera, speakers, medicine and keyboard trays, ultrasonic sensors, solar sensors, and LCD display.
Biorobotics in Medicine: A Snapshot
Mass Monitoring
3
[60]
2017
Temi
Temi Robot
Telepresence for the evaluation, monitoring and treatment of patients.
100 × 35 × 45 (cm). 8 h of operation, moves up to 1 m/s. LiDAR, two depth cameras, RGB camera, five proximity sensors, IMU sensor, six Time of Flight linear sensors, and LCD screen.
[61]
2019
PAL Robotics
ARI
Interact with patients for COVID-19.
53 × 75 × 165 (cm). Maximum payload of 0.5 kg, operates for 8–12 h, Touch screen, Three cameras, two speakers, and four microphones.
[62]
2020
Academic/ Research based
Teleoperation Robot System
Daily remote check-ups, remote auscultation and monitoring emotional states.
Dual arm manipulators (YuMi IRB14000), camera, medical storage box, omnidirectional chassis, wifi transmission modules, tablet for remote consultation.
[63]
2020
Academic/ Research based
Cough Detection Robot
COVID-19 screening, recording temperature and any coughing events.
[64]
2020
Academic/ Research based
Social Distance Robot
Detection of individuals not complying to social distance measures.
2D LiDAR, RGBD camera and thermal camera.
[65]
2019
UBTECH
AIMBOT
temperature measurement, public address system, mask detection, automatic disinfectant.
HD camera, infrared camera, thermal camera, LiDAR, speaker, and disinfection unit with spray nozzle
4
Remote Surgery
Biorobotics in Medicine [66]
2017
UBTECH
CRUZR
Point of contact in quarantine areas, remote consultation, mask detection, broadcast health recommendations and vocalize reminders.
LiDAR, sonar sensors, infrared, depth-perception camera, HD camera, speaker, omnidirectional wheels, and touchscreen.
[67]
2020
Academic/ Research based
SHUYU
Temperature screening for drivers and passengers.
Translational parallel manipulator with a closed passive limb, four high accuracy thermometers, two cameras, ultrasonic sensors, voice broadcast system and dual IR camera.
[67]
2020
Academic/ Research based
SHUYUmini
Temperature screening for pedestrians.
Parallelogram manipulator, high accuracy thermometer, three laser ranging sensors, ultrasonic sensor, and IR camera.
[68]
2020
Misty Robotics
Misty II
Temperature screening.
25.4 × 20.32 (cm). Thermal camera, 4K camera, three microphone arrays, speakers LCD display, bump sensors.
[69]
1999
Intuitive Surgical
DaVinci
Minimally invasive surgery.
91.59 × 127 × 175.3 (cm). Optical and magnetic encoders, hall sensor, IR sensor, and four arm manipulators (as of 2003)
[70]
1995
Computer Motion
ZEUS
Cardiac, abdominal, gynecology and urology surgeries with a surgeon present.
Three arm manipulators for instrument manipulation and control of a endoscopic camera, and two monitors.
Biorobotics in Medicine: A Snapshot
5
[71]
2020
Academic/ Research based
MELODY
Remote ultrasounds.
Three DOF robotic arm manipulator, ultrasound probe, fictive probe and electronic control.
[72]
2019
MGI Tech
MGIUS-R3 Tele-echography Robot System
Remote diagnosis of pneumonia.
108 × 140 × 83 (cm). Two imaging monitors, a fictive transducer, arm manipulator, force sensor with convex and linear array transducers.
1.2 CASE STUDY: ROBOTIC SURGERY FOR NEUROSURGERY Researchers Vakharia, Rodionov, Miserocchi et al (2021) probed the use of robotic surgery for stereoelectroencephalography (SEEG: a process involving the stereotactic implantation of 7–16 electrodes within predefined regions of the brain for locating the sites of drug-resistant focal epilepsy). This “single-centre, single-blinded, randomized controlled trial” published in Scientific Reports (Trial registration: ISRCTN17209025: https://doi. org/10.1186/ISRCTN17209025) scrutinized the performance of a novel robotic trajectory guidance device, the iSYS1 (Medizintechnik GmbH) vs. that of the conventional frameless approach of precision-aiming device (PAD) in 32 patients with 16 patients assigned to each of these two groups. Figure 1.1 below illustrates the protocol with iSYS1: (A) Insertion of the Vertek probe (for navigation in real-world) into the working channel of the iSYS1 device (B) Automatic alignment of the working channel to the trajectory by the system (C) Replacement of the probe with a reduction tube followed by skin incision (D) Defining the entry point (E) The reduction tube drills the skull (F) Screwing the skull anchor bolt (G) Removal of the reduction (H) Placing the other bolts (I) Placing of the electrodes through the bolts (Vakharia, Rodionov, Miserocchi et al, 2021: Open Access: This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License, which permits use, sharing, adaptation, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, as long as you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons licence, and indicate if changes were made. The images or other third party material in this article are included in the article’s Creative Commons licence, unless indicated otherwise in a credit line to the material. If material is not
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Biorobotics in Medicine
included in the article’s Creative Commons licence and your intended use is not permitted by statutory regulation or exceeds the permitted use, you will need to obtain permission directly from the copyright holder. To view a copy of this licence, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/):
An average lowering of 30% was documented by the researchers for the individual bolt insertion implantation time per electrode for the iSYS group vs. that of the PAD group: 6.36 min (95% CI 5.72–7.07) versus 9.06 min (95% CI 8.16–10.06), p = 0.0001, respectively. The target accuracy was better for the PAD group, however: 1.58 mm (95% CI 1.38–1.82) versus 1.16 mm (95% CI 1.01–1.33), p = 0.004, respectively for the PAD and iSYS group. Other outcomes assayed documented no differences paving the way for further fine-tuning of the system for incorporation in medical care. Table 1.2 below documents the post-operative measures for the manual vs. robotic SEEG (Vakharia, Rodionov, Miserocchi et al, 2021: Open Access: This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License, which permits use, sharing, adaptation, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, as long as you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons licence, and indicate if changes were made. The images or other third party material in this article are included in the article’s Creative Commons licence, unless indicated otherwise in a credit line to the material. If material is not included in the article’s Creative Commons licence and your intended use is not permitted by statutory regulation or exceeds the permitted use, you will need to obtain permission directly from the copyright holder. To view a copy of this licence, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/):
Biorobotics in Medicine: A Snapshot iSYS1 group
PAD group
Ratio of median estimate (iSYS1/PAD groups) (95% CI)
P-value**
Electrode insertion time (mins) Median (95% CI)
6.36 (5.72– 9.06 (8.16– 7.07) 10.06)
0.70 (0.61–0.81)
0.0001
Total operative time (mins)* Median (95% CI)
176.4 (153.7– 202.6)
0.92 (0.78–1.08)
0.293
Entry point accuracy (mm) Median (95% CI)
1.09 (0.99– 1.17 (1.06– 1.20) 1.29)
0.93 (0.81–1.07)
0.334
Target point ac1.58 (1.38– 1.16 (1.01– curacy (mm) Median 1.82) 1.33) (95% CI)
1.37 (1.12–1.67)
0.004
Error of angle of implantation (degrees) Median (95% CI)
1.24 (1.04–1.48)
0.023
201.5 (175.5– 231.3)
2.13 (1.87– 1.71 (1.51– 2.41) 1.94)
Post-operative haem- 1/16 orrhage (6.25%)
2/16 (12.5%)
Post-operative infection
0/16 (0%)
0/16 (0%)
Post-operative neurological deficit
0/16 (0%)
0/16 (0%)
7
1.3 COVID-19 AND OTHER ASPECTS Given the COVID-19 pandemic, “social distancing” and “testing” have now penetrated our lives. This has led to robots being probed for COVID-19 testing to minimize the risk to healthcare workers. Table 1.3 below documents robots in COVID-19 testing as documented by Holland and team (2021) in Robotics (Holland J, Kingston L, McCarthy C, Armstrong E, O’Dwyer P, Merz F, McConnell M, 2021: © 2021 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/):
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Biorobotics in Medicine
Ref.
Year of Dev.
Make
Robot Name
Service Area Success Rate
Specifications
[27]
2020
Academic/ Research based
Nasopharyngeal Sampling Robot
Upper throat swabbing
[28]
2020
Lifeline Robotics
Commercial Middle Throat Swab- throat swabbing Robot bing
Gentle and consistent. Swabbing takes 25 s.
UR3 manipulator arm, 3D-printed end-effector, headrest.
[29]
2020
Academic/ Research based
Semi-automatic Oropharyngeal Swab Robot
Middle throat swabbing
No congestion or injury. If sampling force >40 g, evidence of sore throat.
Binocular endoscope serpentine robot arm manipulator, wireless transmission, and human–robot interaction terminal.
[30]
2020
Academic/ Research based
Telerobotic system swab robot
Upper respiratory swabbing
N/A—Pre- Two wide-angle liminary cameras, two testing. microphones, force sensor, wireless transmission, parallel kinematic manipulator, end-effector and Stewart platform.
N/A—Pre- 15 × 6 × 4 (cm). liminary Swab gripper, 2 testing. DOF end-effector for actuating swab, and a 6 DOF passive arm for positioning.
Further, robots have also been employed for sterilization, cleaning and also for social care (for augmenting social communication in autism and personal care). The subsequent chapters present further reports on how robots are being employed in the medical industry. “Helena: Will they be happier when they can feel pain? Dr. Gall: On the contrary. But they will be technically more perfect.” – Karel Čapek, ‘R.U.R.’.
Biorobotics in Medicine: A Snapshot
9
1.4 REFERENCES 1.
2.
Holland J, Kingston L, McCarthy C, Armstrong E, O’Dwyer P, Merz F, McConnell M. Service Robots in the Healthcare Sector. Robotics. 2021; 10(1):47. https://doi.org/10.3390/robotics10010047 Vakharia, V.N., Rodionov, R., Miserocchi, A. et al. Comparison of robotic and manual implantation of intracerebral electrodes: a singlecentre, single-blinded, randomised controlled trial. Sci Rep 11, 17127 (2021). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-96662-4
CHAPTER
2
Robots for Surgery
“The machine has no feelings, it feels no fear and no hope ... it operates according to the pure logic of probability. For this reason I assert that the robot perceives more accurately than man” -MAX FRISCH
Contents 2.1 A Snapshot......................................................................................... 12 2.2 Trends................................................................................................. 15 2.3 Case Study: Open Esophagectomy for Esophageal Cancer: Robot-Assisted Vs. Video-Assisted.................................................... 33 2.4 Case Study: Robots For Total Mesorectal Excision (Tme):..................... 38 2.5 Final Points......................................................................................... 41 2.6 References.......................................................................................... 43
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Biorobotics in Medicine
2.1 A SNAPSHOT The medical field has witnessed advancements many of which are attributed to technology-whether in imaging or design and other novel approaches. A robot is “a reprogrammable, multifunctional manipulator designed to move materials, parts, tools, or other specialized devices through various programmed motions for the performance of a variety of tasks”, as put forth by the Robot Institute of America (1979). While the probing of robots in surgery is still receiving the limelight, the lowering of hospital stay and diminishing of patient trauma have been documented (Beasley, 2012). An early report traces how a robot was employed in a brain biopsy procedure in 1985 that paved the way for robots entering the stage. Figure 2.1 illustrates the systems reported over time from the 1990s (Tirth Ginoya, Yaser Maddahi, Kourosh Zareinia, 2021: Copyright © 2021 Tirth Ginoya et al. This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited):
No
Robotic system
Company
Year
Regulatory status
Procedures
1
NeuroMate®
Currently–Renishaw plc, UK
1987
FDA–1997 (First model) CE mark–1997
Deep brain stimulation (DBS), stereoelectroencephalography (SEEG) [1, 2, 11, 17]
2
ROBODOC® Surgical System
Current–Think Surgical, USA
1992
CE mark–1996 FDA–1998 (THA) FDA–2009 (TKA)
Total hip arthroplasty, Total knee arthroplasty [1, 7, 14, 15]
3
AESOP™ Robotic Surgical System
Computer Motion Inc., USA
1993
FDA–1994 (first model)
MIS–urologic, thoracic, cardiac, etc. fields [8, 17]
Robots for Surgery
13
4
CyberKnife®
Accuray Inc, USA
1994
FDA–2001
Radiosurgery, SBRT, Hypothalamic hamartomas [1, 18, 19, 21]
5
Zeus® Robotic Surgical System
Computer Motion Inc., USA
1995
FDA–2001
MIS, cardiac procedures [1, 8]
6
CASPAR®
OrtoManquet/U.R.S, Germany
1997
N/A
TKA, THA, anterior crucial ligament repair [1, 14, 22]
7
Da Vinci® Surgical System
Intuitive Surgical, USA
1999
FDA–2000 (first model)
MIS [1, 2, 4, 8, 24]
No
Robotic system
Company
Year
Regulatory Procedures status
1
AcuBot
Urobotics Lab, USA
2001
NA
Percutaneous access, radiological percutaneous interventions [25, 26]
2
PathFinder™
Current–Prosurgics, UK
2001
FDA–2004
Stereotactic neurosurgery, brain tumors, Parkinson’s disease, and epilepsy [27, 28]
3
InnoMotion
Current–DePuy Initial modSynthesis Inc., el–2001 USA
CE mark 2005
MRI-guided percutaneous interventions [25, 31, 32]
4
Niobe™ ES Magnetic Navigation System
Stereotaxis, USA
CE mark– 2008 FDA–2009
Treatment of cardiac arrhythmias, catheter interventions, endoscopy [33, 35]
2003
14
Biorobotics in Medicine
5
Raven Surgical System
Universities of Washington and California, USA
2005
NA
MIS [36, 37]
6
Sensei®
Current–Auris Health, USA
Initial Experiment–2005
FDA–2007
Catheter interventions, atrial fibrillation [33, 38]
7
NeuroArm™
Current–IMRIS Inc., Canada
2006
FDA–2008
Microsurgery, stereotaxy, neurosurgery, treatment of glioma, [2, 5, 6, 39]
8
FreeHand® v1.2
Free hand 2010 2008 ltd, UK
FDA–2009
Laparoscopy, MIS [1, 24]
9
Telelap ALF-X
Current–TransEtrix Surgical Inc., USA
2008
CE mark– 2011
Gynecological surgery [42], endoscopy, [43]
10
ROSA® Brain
Zimmer Biomet, France
2008
CE mark– 2008 (from website) FDA–2012
Keyhole procedures, open skull operations, deep brain stimulation [1, 3, 4, 46]
11
Novalis® powered by TrueBeam™ STx
BrainLab Inc., Germany and Varian Medical System, USA
2010
NA
Radiosurgery, radiotherapy [1, 45]
No
Robotic system Company
Year
Regulatory status
Procedures
1
Renaissance®
2011
FDA and CE mark 2011, FDA–2012 (neuro procedure)
Biopsies, osteotomies, spinal deformities [1, 3, 4]
Current Medtronic, Ireland
Robots for Surgery
15
2
ROSA® spine
Zimmer Biomet, 2012 France
FDA–2016 CE mark–2014 (from website)
Biopsies, planning, [3, 4, 17, 46]
3
Flex® robotic system
Medrobotics Corp., USA
2013
CE mark–2014 FDA–2015 (ENT), 2017 (colorectal surgery)
Laparoendoscopic single-port surgery (LESS), transoral surgery [24, 50, 51, 65]
4
MAKO™
Stryker
2015
FDA–2015 (TKA), 2015 (THA)
Total Hip arthroplasty, Total knee arthroplasty, unicompartmental knee arthroplasty [15, 53]
5
Senhance™ TransEtrix Sur- 2015 Surgical System gical Inc., USA
FDA–2017
Laparoscopy, gynecological procedures, hysterectomy [24, 54, 55]
6
Preceyes Surgi- Preceyes BV, cal System Netherlands
2016
CE mark–2019
Retina surgery, intraocular procedures [56]
7
Versius® CMR Surgical, Surgical System UK
2016 CE mark–2019 (cadaveric trials) reveal–2018
Minimal access surgery, colorectal procedures [57, 58, 65]
8
Navio™ Surgi- Current–Smith 2017 cal System and Nephew, UK
FDA–2016 (TKR)
Knee prosthesis positioning, unicompartmental knee arthroplasty [59]
9
SPORT™ Sur- Titan Medical gical System Inc., Canada
2017
FDA–to be applied in 2020
MIS, single-incision laparoscopic surgery (SIL), LESS [17, 24, 61, 65]
10
Ion™ roboticassisted platform
Intuitive surgical, USA
2017
FDA–2019
Minimal invasive biopsy, MIS
11
Monarch™ Platform
Aruis Health, USA
2018
FDA–2018
Peripheral bronchoscopy, endoscopy, [63]
12
Mazor X– Stealth™ Edition
Medtronic Plc., 2019 Ireland
FDA–2018
Spine surgery, Pedicle Instrumentation, MIS [46, 47]
2.2 TRENDS The usage of robotic surgery with time was scrutinized on general surgical procedures with data from the Michigan Surgical Quality Collaborative
16
Biorobotics in Medicine
(MSQC): constituted by 73 Michigan hospitals and the Blue Cross/Blue Shield of Michigan based on 169404 patient data for January 1, 2012, through June 30, 2018. The researchers Sheetz, Claflin and Dimick (2020) reported a “dramatic increase” in the use of robotic surgery for the time span: at 2.1% per year from 1.8% to 15.1%. While this trend was on similar lines for most surgeries, robotic surgery in inguinal hernia repair rose from 0.7% to 28.8% over this time. Figure 2.2 below illustrates the findings of employing robotic surgery in 169404 patient data from 73 Michigan hospitals (2012-2018) (Sheetz KH, Claflin J, Dimick JB, 2020: This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the CC-BY license, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium. You are not required to obtain permission to reuse this article content, provided that you credit the author and journal):
Trends in usage of the surgical approaches:
Procedure
Proportional Use, % Year 2012
Year 2018
Fold Difference Annual Slope (95% CI), %
All
1.8
15.1
8.4
2.1 (1.9-2.3)
Inguinal hernia repair
0.7
28.8
41.1
5.4 (5.1-5.7)
Ventral hernia repair
0.5
22.4
44.8
3.7 (3.5-3.9)
Colectomy
2.5
16.3
6.5
2.1 (1.8-2.4)
Reflux surgery
5.4
26.0
4.8
2.8 (2.3-3.2)
Proctectomy
3.1
26.7
8.6
4.0 (3.2-4.9)
Cholecystectomy
2.5
7.5
3.0
0.4 (0.3-0.5)
Complex cancer resec- 2.1 tions
3.9
1.9
0.4 (0.1-0.7)
Robots for Surgery
17
In conclusion, the rapid diffusion of robotic surgery for general surgeries was documented by the researchers. This rise was associated with a dip in the commonly used minimally invasive approaches, like laparoscopy. This paves the way for efficiently oversee this approach to ensure its use safely and effectively. A more detailed table of the above research is depicted below in table 2.1 (Sheetz KH, Claflin J, Dimick JB, 2020: This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the CC-BY license, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium. You are not required to obtain permission to reuse this article content, provided that you credit the author and journal): Procedure
Surgical Approacha Laparoscopic
Open
Robotic
Before After Difference Before After Difference Before After Differ(95% CI) (95% CI) ence (95% CI) All Proportional use, %
53.2
Annual slope, 1.3 %
51.3
−1.9 (−2.2 44.8 to −1.6)
40.6
−4.2 (−4.5 NA to −3.9)
8.8
8.8 (8.7 to 8.9)
−0.3
−1.6 (−1.7 −1.6 to −1.5)
−0.4
1.2 (1.1 to NA 1.3)
2.8
2.8 (2.7 to 2.9)
17.5
4.7 (3.7 to 74.0 5.7)
60.4
−13.6 (−15.1 to −12.2)
19.2
19.2 (18.7 to 19.7)
0.5
1.5 (1.1 to −1.0 1.9)
−1.1
−0.1 (−0.6 NA to 0.3)
5.4
5.4 (5.1 to 5.6)
26.7
−0.8 (−1.8 73.0 to 0.2)
64.2
−8.8 (−9.8 NA to −7.9)
9.0
9.0 (8.6 to 9.3)
−0.2
−1.8 (−2.2 −1.6 to −1.5)
−0.8
0.8 (0.4 to NA 1.1)
4.0
4.0 (3.8 to 4.2)
37.7
5.0 (4.0 to 64.1 6.0)
52.5
−11.7 (−12.7 to −10.6)
NA
9.6
9.6 (9.2 to 10.0)
0.4
−1.5 (−1.8 −2.2 to −1.1)
−1.1
1.1 (0.8 to NA 1.5)
3.1
3.1 (2.8 to 3.4)
Inguinal hernia repair Proportional use, %
12.8
Annual slope, −1.0 %
NA
Ventral hernia repair Proportional use, %
27.4
Annual slope, 1.7 % Colectomy Proportional use, %
32.7
Annual slope, 1.9 %
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Biorobotics in Medicine
Reflux surgery Proportional use, %
69.1
Annual slope, −0.5 %
75.6
6.5 (4.2 to 24.2 8.9)
8.4
−15.8 (−18.3 to −13.3)
0.6
1.1 (0.6 to −0.4 1.6)
−1.1
15.0
−1.9 (−5.4 79.3 to 1.5)
−0.2
NA
14.2
14.2 (13.3 to 15.1)
−0.7 (−1.0 NA to −0.4)
3.8
3.8 (3.4 to 4.2)
66.8
−12.5 (−16.1 to −8.9)
18.7
18.7 (16.9 to 20.5)
−0.8 (−1.2 −1.0 to −0.2)
−1.2
−0.2 (−1.6 NA to 1.1)
5.8
5.8 (4.8 to 6.9)
87.1
−0.2 (−1.0 14.9 to 0.5)
13.1
−1.7 (−4.4 NA to 1.0)
5.9
5.9 (5.7 to 6.1)
0.1
1.1 (0.9 to 0.1 1.2)
−0.2
−0.1 (−0.2 NA to 0.1)
1.4
1.4 (1.3 to 1.5)
21.7
2.6 (−0.1 to 5.2)
78.2
74.7
−3.5 (−6.2 NA to −0.7)
3.5
3.5 (2.9 to 4.1)
0.2
−2.2 (−3.2 −2.8 to 1.1)
−0.3
2.4 (1.4 to NA 3.6)
0.6
0.6 (0.2 to 1.1)
Proctectomy Proportional use, %
16.9
Annual slope, 0.6 %
NA
Cholecystectomy Proportional use, %
87.4
Annual slope, −1.0 % Complex cancer resections Proportional use, %
19.1
Annual slope, 2.4 %
A systematic review published in Frontiers in Surgery of the employing of robotic assistance in plastic and reconstructive surgery documented the promise of this approach in terms of boosted access and dexterity albeit presenting the challenge of costs. In terms of microsurgery, table 2.2 below documents the feasibility of robotic assistance (© 2017 Dobbs, Cundy, Samarendra, Khan and Whitaker. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) or licensor are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms):
Robots for Surgery Reference
Year Study design
Operations performed
19
Outcomes reported
Preclinical studies Katz et al. (10)
2005 Animal model
Arterial and venous anasto- All anastomoses grossly moses and free-flap trans- patent, confirmed by auplantation (N = 1 pig) dible Doppler signals, visibly adequate perfusion of tissues, and arterial bleeding seen after incision distal to the anastomoses 4 h after the procedure
Knight et al. 2005 Animal model Arterial end-to-end anas(11) Case controlled tomoses (N = 31 vs N = 30 controls)
Karama2006 Animal tissue noukian et al. samples (12)
A remarkable degree of tremor filtration, but significantly slower operative time. All anastomoses were patent and nonleaking
Slit arteriotomy and end-to- The Zeus robotic system end arterial anastomoses in is a viable tool for procine hearts microsurgical vascular reconstruction. It allows for precise movement, lack of hand tremor, enhanced microvascularisation and improved ergonomics, compared to conventional human assistance. The major advantage is the ability of the robot to scale down the surgeon’s movements to a microscopic level
Katz et al. (13)
2006 Animal cadavers Microvascular anastomoses All anastomoses were of tarsal and superficial successful and patent femoral vessels (N = 2 dog postoperatively cadavers)
Taleb et al. (14)
2008 Animal cadaver Microvascular anastomoses Immediate and delayed (1 in rat tail transplantation (N h postoperation) patency = 2) of the arterial anastomoses
20
Biorobotics in Medicine
Ramdhian et 2011 Animal tissue al. (15) samples
Earthworm segment anasto- The high quality 3D moses (N = 15) vision allowed by the robotic system was excellent and compensated for loss of tactile feedback. The robotic system eliminated physiological tremor. Motion scaling by the robot improved precision of the surgical gesture
Lee et al. (16) 2012 Live animal models
Femoral artery end-to-end anastomoses (N = 20)
Generation of learning curves for robot-assisted microvascular anastomosis. Important aspects of learning identified included starting level, learning plateau and learning rate
Robert et al. 2013 Human cadaver Radial/ulnar artery dissec- Successful anastomoses (17) tion and microvascular anas- The assembling and tomoses (N = 2 cadavers, 4 disassembling of the anastomoses) vascular clamp were time consuming
In both cases (radial and ulnar arteries), the 10/0 needle was bent and a second suture had to be used Alrasheed et 2014 Synthetic vessel Microvascular anastomoses Successful validation of al. (18) models (N = 50) microsurgical assessment tool and characterization of learning curve Proficiency gained by operators over 5 learning sessions Selber and Alrasheed (19)
2014 Synthetic models Microvascular anastomoses Definition of a learning (N = 5 per surgeon) curve in microsurgery and the development of a structured assessment of robotic microsurgical skills
Robots for Surgery
21
Willems et al. 2016 Synthetic miMicrovascular anastomoses Manual surgery was supe(20) crovessel models (N = 80, vs 80 control) rior to robotically assisted microsurgery in techniCase controlled cally easy exposures. In difficult exposures (greater depth and lower sidewall angles), however, robotically assisted microsurgery had a shorter surgery time and a higher comfort rating. Objective Structured Assessment of Technical Skills scores were similar to those assessing traditional microsurgery Clinical studies Boyd et al. (21)
2006 Case cohort, retrospective
Van der Hulst 2006 Case report et al. (22)
Robotic vessel harvest of internal mammary vessels for use in free-flap breast reconstructive procedures (11 muscle-sparing transverse rectus abdominis musculocutaneous (TRAM) flaps, six superior gluteal artery (SGA) flaps, four superficial inferior epigastric artery flaps, and one superior gluteal arterial perforator flap) (N = 22 free-flaps, in 20 patients)
Pedicle was harvested with robot-assisted technique
Breast reconstruction with muscle-sparing free TRAMflap, using robotic arterial anastomosis (N = 1)
The time to perform this anastomosis was about 40 min and significantly longer than the standard technique (around 15 min)
Microvascular anastomosis via standard technique An average pedicle length of 6.7 cm is long enough to allow anastomosis without vein graft
The number of procedures carried out in each study is documented and represented as N number. Robots have also been employed for muscle flap harvest as documented in table 2.3 below (© 2017 Dobbs, Cundy, Samarendra, Khan and Whitaker. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the
22
Biorobotics in Medicine
Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) or licensor are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms): Reference
Year
Study design
Operations performed
Outcomes reported
2011
Human cadaver
Latissimus dorsi muscle harvest (N = 10 in 8 cadavers)
Successful harvest of all muscles
Patel and Ped- 2012 ersen (26)
Human cadaver
Rectus abdominis muscle No postoperative comdissection and harvest (N plications or surgical= 2) site morbidity
Selber et al. (27)
Human cadaver
Latissimus dorsi muscle harvest and transfer (N = 8)
Successful harvest and transfer of all flaps that left no visible incisions, with no major complications
Patel et al. (28) 2012
Case report
Pedicled myocutaneous latissimus dorsi flap for shoulder reconstruction after sarcoma resection (N = 1)
No objective outcomes reported-flap successfully raised robotically One of the limitations is the time/learning curve
Lazzaro et al. 2013 (29)
Case report
Intercostal muscle flap after lobectomy (done in conjunction with VATS) (N = 1)
Success of surgery— no conversion to open procedures and both patients returned home 5 days postop
Preclinical studies Selber (25)
2012
Clinical studies
Robots for Surgery
23
Ibrahim et al. (30)
2014
Case series
Rectus abdominus Less tissue violation, muscle flap harvest (N not compared to open reported) technique, resulting in reduced postoperative pain, shorter duration of hospital stay, and more rapid functional recovery
Chung et al. (31)
2015
Case series
Transaxillary gasless robot-assisted latissimus dorsi muscle harvest (3 delayed reconstructions, 4 immediate after nipple sparing mastectomy, 5 corrections of deformity in Poland syndrome) (N = 12)
Operating time, general satisfaction, cosmetic satisfaction, scar, and symmetry satisfaction were all outcomes measured via survey given to all patients with followup longer than months Robotic time decreases with experience
Singh et al. (32)
2015
Case series and retrospective review
Extralevator abdomino- An incisionless roperineal excision with botic flap harvest with robotic rectus abdominis preservation of the flap harvest, for reconanterior rectus sheath struction after resection of obviates the risk of distal rectal adenocarci- ventral hernia while noma (N = 3) providing robust tissue closure of the radiated abdominoperineal excision wound
The number of procedures carried out in each study is documented and represented as N number. The suitability of robots in assisting nerve repair was also demonstrated in preclinical and clinical systems as in table 2.4 below (© 2017 Dobbs, Cundy, Samarendra, Khan and Whitaker. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) or licensor are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms):
24
Biorobotics in Medicine
Reference
Year Study design
Operations performed Outcomes reported
Preclinical studies Latif et al. (34) 2008 Animal model Intercostal nerve Successful anastomosis grafting for reversal of with no apparent complithoracic sympathectomy cations (N = 1) Nectoux et al. (35)
2009 Animal and human tissue samples
Extrafascicular neurolysis, donor nerve dissection and subsequent repair of peripheral nerve (N not reported)
The robot removed physiological tremor There was some technical difficulty with the choice and manipulation of the three-dimensional stereoscopic vision enabled a better view and safe and accurate repair of peripheral nerve lesions
Mantovani et al. 2011 Human cadaver Supraclavicular brachial (36) plexus exploration and nerve graft anastomosis and reconstruction (N = 2)
The robot allowed microsurgery to be performed in a very small space with telemanipulation and minimally invasive techniques
Garcia et al. (37)
2012 Human cadaver Sural nerve graft and The goals of the opneurotisation using the eration were achieved accessory nerve (N = 3) without conversion to open surgery. There were no complications
de Melo et al. (38)
2013 Human cadaver Microsurgical nerve Dissection and transfer transfer of the branches achieved successfully of the axillary nerve onto the nerve of the long head of the triceps brachii (N = 1)
Facca et al. (39) 2014 Human cadaver Sural nerge graft between C5 root or spinal nerve, and the musculocutaneous nerve (N = 8)
Porto de Melo et al. (40)
Endoscopic treatment of supraclavicular nerve palsy is feasible, however, both sural nerve grafts and C5-6 avulsions were converted to open
2014 Animal model Phrenic nerve harvest Successful nerve harvest and application in brachial plexus surgery (N = 1)
Robots for Surgery
25
Miyamoto et al. 2016 Animal model Intercostal nerve harvest Physiological tremor was (41) for brachial plexus re- eliminated and there were construction (N = 3) no major complications Clinical studies Latif et al. (42) 2011 Case study
Intercostal nerve graft harvesting and grafting into sympathetic chain using tension free nerve anastomoses (N = 1)
Successful operation, patient discharged one day postoperatively and no sign of Horner’s syndrome on short term follow-up
Coveliers et al. 2013 Case cohort, (43) retrospective
Selective postganglionic thoracic sympathectomy for patients with palmar or axillary hyperhidrosis (N = 110 operations in 55 patients)
Of the 55 patients, 53 (96%) had sustained relief of their hyperhidrosis at a median follow-up of 24 months (range, 3 to 36 months), and compensatory sweating was seen in four patients (7.2%)
Naito et al. (44) 2012 Case cohort
The Oberlin procedure of nerve transfer for restoration of elbow flexion (N = 4)
At 12 months’ mean follow-up, all patients had recovered to useful elbow flexion, with no sensory/ motor deficit in the ulnar nerve territory
Berner (45) 2013 Case series (book chapter)
Repair of brachial plexus injury (N = 12)
Considering the microsurgical gesture, all nerve repairs were achieved under excellent conditions Need to convert to open surgery in nine cases
Tigan et al. (46) 2014 Case cohort
Nerve grafting after excision of benign peripheral nerve tumors (N = 7)
In postoperative surveys, neuropathic pain halved from 6/10 to 3/10 postop, with no worsening of sensory deficits
The number of procedures carried out in each study is documented and represented as N number.
26
Biorobotics in Medicine
Procedures related to upper limb surgeries are documented in table 2.5 below (© 2017 Dobbs, Cundy, Samarendra, Khan and Whitaker. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) or licensor are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms): Reference
Year
Study design
Operations performed
Outcomes reported
Animal cadaver
Humeral cross-section, amputation, and replantation of the left forelimb. Stages done with surgical robot were soft tissue repair and vessel patency tests during limb replantation (not any microvascular procedures) (N = 1)
Patency tests were all positive. Venous bleeding demonstrated vascular success of replantation
Preclinical studies Taleb et al. (47)
2009
The robot removed physiological tremor and allowed for a smaller operating field
Huart et al. (48)
2012
Human cadaver
Kite flap hand surgery (N = 1)
Operating time was longer with the robot, but kite flap transfer was successful
Maire et al. (49)
2012
Human cadaver
Removal of left hallux medial hemipulp (with sensory nerve, collateral artery and dorsal vein) and transfer to left thumb radial hemipulp (N = 1)
Successful free hallux hemipulp transfer, however, operating time was increased by non-microsurgical moments which could be improved by instrumentation improvement
2010
Case report
Robotic anastomosis of No postoperative probvein grafts for hypothenar lems of note hammer syndrome (N = 1) Successful cure of vasomotor disorder
Clinical studies Facca and Liverneaux (50)
Robots for Surgery
27
The number of procedures carried out in each study is documented and represented as N number. A lot of studies have been documented for Trans-Oral Robotic Surgery (TORS) with literature demonstrative of the promise of surgical robots (© 2017 Dobbs, Cundy, Samarendra, Khan and Whitaker. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) or licensor are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms): Reference
Year Study design
Operations performed
Outcomes reported
Preclinical studies Selber et al. (54) 2010 Coffee cup models, TORS free radial forearm pig cadavers, hu- flap reconstruction of man cadavers oropharyngeal defect (N = 2) Robotic microvascular anastomosis Smartt et al. (55) 2013 Human cadaver
Superiorly based posterior pharyngeal flap transfer (N = 3)
Successful reconstruction of the oropharynx by trans-oral robotic flap inset and microvascular anastomosis
Successful transfer of posterior pharyngeal flaps, with mean surgical time of 113 min. Technically, the learning curve for using the robot telemanipulator was steep There was no damage to adjacent structures
Clinical studies Desai et al. (56) 2008 Case cohort, retro- Mucosal flap and No intra- or postopspective analysis pyriform sinus flap recon- erative complications, structions (N = 7) one patient required tracheostomy
28
Biorobotics in Medicine
Mukhija et al. (57)
2009 Case series
Radial forearm fasciocutaneous free-flap harvest and reconstruction of oral cavity (N = 2)
Successful positioning of the flap, shorter operating time compared to conventional techniques, shorter hospital stay compared to mandibulotomy approach
Selber (58)
2010 Case series
Free-flap reconstruction of oropharynx (radial forearm free-flap, anterolateral thigh flap, facial artery, myomucosal flap), primary closure after tumor resection, and microvascular anastomosis (N = 5)
Better access and improved precision within the oropharynx, compared to conventional tecnhiques
Radial forearm flap for reconstruction of the tounge base, vallecula and pre-epiglotic space, due to soft tissue and hyoid radionecrosis (N = 1)
The patient passed a swallow evaluation after 1 week, and started an oral diet 8 days after the operation
Free-flap reconstruction of oropharynx—sternocleidomastoid free-flap, mucosal mulscular flaps and pharyngoplasty (N = 30)
Equivalent rates of loco-regional and distant control of malignancy and better short-term eating ability, compared to conventional techniques
Garfein et al. (59)
Genden et al. (60)
2011 Case report
2011 Prospective nonrandomized case– control study
Successful microvascular anastomosis
There was good function showed by video oesophagram 6 week postoperatively
No major long term sequelae
Robots for Surgery
29
Genden et al. (61)
2011 Prospective nonrandomized case– control study
Musculomucosal adPostoperatively, vancement flap pharyngo- patients regained explasty (N = 30) cellent function, with Radial forearm free-flap near-normal scores on the Functional Oral reconstruction Intake Scale and Performance Status Scale for Head and Neck Cancer Patients at 1 year after surgery
Bonawitz and Duvvuri (62)
2012 Case cohort, retro- Free-flap oropharyngeal No major complicaspective reconstruction, with tions and no flap loss microvascular anastomoses in the tongue base and soft palate (N not reported)
Longfield et al. 2012 Case series (63)
Robotic reconstruction after resection squamous cell carcinoma of the oropharynx using local and distant free-flaps, with microvascular anastomoses (N not reported)
Bonawitz and Duvvuri (64)
Local random transposi- No major complication flaps from buccal tions mucosa, the hard palate or the pharyngeal wall (N not reported)
2013 Case series
Patients can be safely reconstructed (locally or with free tissue transfer) robotically after TORS
Facial artery musculomucosal (FAMM) flap for larger defects of the soft palate Bonawitz and Duvvuri (65)
2013 Case cohort, retro- FAMM flap reconstrucspective tion after removal of malignant tumors of the soft palate (N = 5)
No major complications, no flap loss
30
Biorobotics in Medicine
Duvvuri et al. (66)
2013 Case cohort, retro- Oropharyngeal reconspective struction with FAMM free-flaps, ALT free-flaps, radial forearm flaps and uvular flaps (N = 12)
No major complications, some minor flap dehiscence, two revision procedures needed (one fistula, one bulky flap)
Hans et al. (67) 2013 Case series
Radial forearm free-flap A complication of a reconstruction after resec- neck hematoma retion of hypopharyngeal quiring draining under carcinoma (N = 2) general anesthesia, no fistulae
Park et al. (68)
Radial forearm muscle No surgery-related free-flap reconstruction of complications of oropharynx (N = 7) infections, viable and functioning free-flaps in all patients, one hundred percent of patients happy with postoperative appearance and could tolerate an oral diet
2013 Case series, prospective study
Song et al. (69) 2013 Case series
De Almeida et al. (70)
Robotic ablation surgery, Flap insetting and mifree-flap reconstruction croanastomoses were (radial forearm free-flaps, achieved using a speanterolateral thigh flap), cially manufactured and microvascular anasto- robotic instrument mosis (N = 5) No complications
2014 Case cohort, retro- Velopharyngoplasty Good swallowing spective reconstructinos with local outcomes, no carotid flaps alone, regional and artery ruptures free-flaps, and secondary healing (N = 92)
Byeon et al. (71) 2015 Case series
Reconstruction and Good cosmetic outlymph node dissection for comes and no major head and neck maligcomplications nancy (N = 37)
Robots for Surgery Perrenot et al. (72)
2014 Case series
Infra-hyoid myocutaneous flap reconstructions (N = 8)
31
Good esthetic results One case required re-operating due to hemostasis No other complications Seven out of eight patients tolerated oral feeding postoperatively
Lai et al. (73)
2015 Case cohort
Free radial forearm fasciocutaneous flap reconstruction after resection of oropharyngeal cancer (N = 5)
All reconstructive surgeries were successful, with no flap failure or take-backs, no wound infections and no fistulae
Meccariello et al. (74)
2016 Case report
Resection and reconstruc- Restoration of a comtion, with temporalis petent velopharyngeal muscle flap, of squamous sphincter, with watercell carcinoma of the tight seal between lateral oropharyngeal wall pharynx and neck extending into the soft Timely healing and palate (N = 1) enhanced postoperative functional results
Gorphe et al. (75)
2017 Non-randomized FAMM and free ALT flap Robotic surgery phase II muti-center reconstructions of the proved feasible, and prospective trial oropharynx (N = 9) further technological progress in developing robotic systems specifically for transoral surgery will be of benefit to patients
Biron et al. (76) 2017 Case–control series Radial forearm free-flap reconstruction after excision of oropharyngeal squamous cell carcinoma (N = 18)
Significantly shorter admission duration and fewer postoperative complications
The number of procedures carried out in each study is documented and represented as N number.
32
Biorobotics in Medicine
Reference
Year
Study design Operations performed
Outcomes reported
Preclinical studies Khan et al. (77)
2016
Airway manikin and human cadaver
The Hynes With each variation, a subjective pharyngoplasty assessment (rated as poor, fair, (N = 1) good or excellent) was made for vision and access to either the posterior pharynx or palate, and it was validated by two of the authors for each set-up
Podolsky et al. (78)
2017
Cleft palate simulator test bed
The von Langenbeck cleft palate repair procedure (N = 1)
Excellent close up visualization of the anatomy, the ability to articulate the wrist intra-orally (not possible with standard instruments), tremor reduction, better ambidexterity and more precise dissection and tissue manipulation, compared to conventional open techniques
Controlled cohort study
The robot was used to dissection and repair the palatine muscles in 10 patients with a cleft of the palate (N = 10, 30 controls)
Increased dexterity and operative view using the robot
Clinical studies Nadjmi (79)
Reference
2015
Year
Study design Operations performed
Overall operative time was longer using the robot compared to the control group in which the traditional method was used
Outcomes reported
Microvascular surgery Dombre et al. (80)
2003
Live animal Skin graft (N not Robotically harvested skin samples model were of the same quality as manureported) ally harvested ones
Robots for Surgery
33
Taghizadeh et al. 2014 (81)
Human cadaver
“Necklift” Successful necklift procedures, platysmaplasty— with certain areas for improvement a short incision in surgical methodology suggested facelift with when using robotic systems (hard concomitant to interpret) robot-assisted neck lift (N = 6)
Shi et al. (82)
2017
Live animal Mandibular bone The robotically assisted drilling model drilling ostedemonstrated more accurate drill otomy (N = 1) positioning, increased stability and accuracy, and relieved surgeon fatigue so as to reduce facial trauma
2016
Case-report
Clinical studies Ciudad et al. (83)
Tight gastroepi- Successful flap harvest, but no ploic lymph node postoperative surgical outcomes flap (RGE-LNF) reported for the treatment of lymphedema of the extremities (N = 1) Microvascular procedures performed with standard technique
The number of procedures carried out in each study is documented and represented as N number.
2.3 CASE STUDY: OPEN ESOPHAGECTOMY FOR ESOPHAGEAL CANCER: ROBOT-ASSISTED VS. VIDEO-ASSISTED Mederos and team (2021) scrutinized the clinical outcomes in literature for robot-assisted minimally invasive esophagectomy (RAMIE) vs. video-assisted minimally invasive esophagectomy (VAMIE) and open
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Biorobotics in Medicine
esophagectomy (OE). Esophageal cancer treatment often entails esophagectomy; the researchers probed for articles on robotic surgery or esophagectomy or cancer between January 1, 2013, and May 6, 2020, to narrow down on 21 studies with 9355 patients. The results of these analyses are documented in figure 2.3 below (Mederos MA, de Virgilio MJ, Shenoy R, et al, 2021: This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the CC-BY license, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium. You are not required to obtain permission to reuse this article content, provided that you credit the author and journal):
Robots for Surgery
35
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Biorobotics in Medicine
While a modest lowering in pulmonary complications was demonstrated with RAMIE as opposed to VAMIE, there were no variations between the two approaches for estimated blood loss (EBL), the number of lymph nodes (LN) harvested, anastomotic leak, recurrent laryngeal nerve (RLN) palsy, total complications, hospital length of stay (LOS) and the 90-day mortality. When examined against OE, the operative time and lymph node harvest were more for RAMIE while the EBL, pulmonary and overall complications were lower in RAMIE. Overall, the authors concluded that RAMIE and VAMIE are on similar lines with RAMIE however documenting lesser pulmonary complications as opposed to VAMIE and OE necessitates more detailed analyses. Table 2.6 below summarizes the findings (Mederos MA, de Virgilio MJ, Shenoy R, et al, 2021: This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the CC-BY license, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium. You are not required to obtain permission to reuse this article content, provided that you credit the author and journal):
Robots for Surgery Outcome
Study limitations
Consistency
37
Directness Precision Certainty of evidence
Intraoperative outcomes Operating room time Greater for RAMIE than VAMIE Greater for RAMIE than OE
•
RCT: low; • Inconsistent Direct matched observational studies: moderate; Consistent Direct unmatched observational studies: high
Imprecise Low
Precise
High
Lymph node harvest Greater for RAMIE than VAMIE
RCT: low; matched observational studies: moderate; unmatched observational Greater for RA- studies: high MIE than OE
Inconsistent
Direct
Imprecise Low
Consistent
Direct
Imprecise Moderate
Consistent
Direct
Imprecise Moderate
Inconsistent
Direct
Precise
High
Consistent
Direct
Precise
High
Consistent
Direct
Imprecise Moderate
Inconsistent
Direct
Precise
Low
Consistent
Direct
Precise
Moderate
Estimated blood loss Less for RAMIE than VAMIE Less for than RAMIE than OE
RCT: low; matched observational studies: moderate; unmatched observational studies: high
Short-term postoperative outcomes Anastomotic leak RAMIE equiva- RCT: low; matched obserlent to VAMIE vational studies: moderate; RAMIE equiva- unmatched observational studies: high lent to OE Recurrent laryngeal nerve injury RAMIE equiva- RCT: low; matched oblent to VAMIE servational studies: low; RAMIE equiva- unmatched observational studies: moderate lent to OE Pulmonary complications
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Biorobotics in Medicine
Fewer for RAMIE than VAMIE
RCT: low; matched observational studies: moderate; unmatched observational Fewer for RA- studies: high MIE than OE
Inconsistent
Direct
Precise
Moderate
Consistent
Direct
Impreci- Moderate sion
Direct
Imprecise Moderate
Direct
Imprecise Very low
Consistent
Direct
Imprecise Moderate
Consistent
Direct
Imprecise Moderate
Consistent
Direct
Imprecise High
Inconsistent
Direct
Imprecise Very low
Inconsistent
Direct
Imprecise Very low
Inconsistent
Direct
Imprecise Very low
Inconsistent
Direct
Imprecise Very low
Consistent
Direct
Imprecise Very low
Length of stay RAMIE equiva- Matched observational stud- Inconsistent lent to VAMIE ies: moderate; unmatched observational studies: high Inconsistent Less for RAMIE than OE Total complications Greater for RAMIE than VAMIE
RCT: low; matched observational studies: moderate; unmatched observational Fewer for RA- studies: high MIE than OE Mortality RAMIE equiva- RCT: low; matched obserlent to VAMIE vational studies: moderate; RAMIE equiva- unmatched observational studies: high lent to OE Long-term and oncologic outcomes Recurrence Less for RAMIE than VAMIE
RCT: low; matched observational studies: moderate; unmatched observational RAMIE equiva- studies: high lent to OE Cancer-free survival Greater for RAMIE than VAMIE
RCT: low; matched observational studies: high; unmatched observational RAMIE equiva- studies: high lent to OE
Abbreviations: OE, open esophagectomy; RAMIE, robot-assisted minimally invasive esophagectomy; RCT, randomized clinical trial; VAMIE, video-assisted minimally invasive esophagectomy.
2.4 CASE STUDY: ROBOTS FOR TOTAL MESORECTAL EXCISION (TME): A 2021-published report by Zeng, Wang, Li, Lin, Zhu and Yi in Frontiers in Surgery probed the suitability of Micro Hand S surgical robot (independently
Robots for Surgery
39
developed system produced by Shandong Wego Surgical Robot Co., LTD) and the da Vinci surgical robot (produced by Intuitive Surgical Co., LTD) (ClinicalTrials.gov: NCT02752698). Figure 2.4 below illustrates the robotic system, the incision points and the surgery (© 2021 Zeng, Wang, Li, Lin, Zhu and Yi. This is an openaccess article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms):
(A) The patient’s console (B) The doctor’s console
Incision sites:
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Biorobotics in Medicine
Operating scenario:
Of 54 patients, enrolled, 15 patients were operated by the Micro Hand S system and 39 patients by the da Vinci system. No perioperative death or anastomotic leak was observed and both systems documented no difference for hospital stay, time or blood loss. The time taken differed between the systems: 24.2 ± 9.4 min for the Micro Hand S robot and 17.1 ± 5.1 min for the da Vinci system with the total surgery and hospital costs lower for the Micro Hand S group. These findings of the use of robotic surgery are documented in table 2.7 below (© 2021 Zeng, Wang, Li, Lin, Zhu and Yi. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms): p
Micro Hand S
da Vinci
(n = 14)
(n = 14)
Total operation time (min)
260.6 (45.4)
256 (42.9)
0.783
Robotic installation time (min)
24.2 (9.4)
17.1 (5.1)
0.021*
Robotic operation time (min)
143.29 (36.0)
137.9 (27.4)
0.662
Blood loss (ml)
123.6 (60.2)
127.1 (105.5)
0.913
Anastomotic leak, n (%)
0/14 (0)
0/14 (0)
1.000
Perioperative death, n (%)
0/14 (0)
0/14 (0)
1.000
Hospital stay (d)
13.2 (6.3)
12.6 (4.2)
0.753
Time to first liquid diet (d)
2.4 (0.5)
2.4 (0.6)
0.746
Time of getting out of bed (d)
2.1 (0.3)
2.2 (0.4)
0.297
Total hospital costs (yuan)
87,040.1 (24,676.9) 125,292.3 (17,706.7) 0.000**
Surgery costs (yuan)
25,772.3 (4,117.0)
46,940.9 (10,199.7)
0.000**
Robots for Surgery
41
Values are presented as mean (SD). *
P < 0.05, P < 0.001.
**
Micro Hand S (n = 14)
da Vinci (n = 14)
p
Number of lymph nodes harvested (n)
15.8 (3.0)
15.5 (3.6)
0.776
Distance to PRM (cm)
8.2 (3.1)
9.5 (4.2)
0.919
Distance to DRM (cm)
2.3 (1.1)
2.3 (1.1)
0.374
Positive rate of CRM, n (%)
0/14 (0)
0/14 (0)
1.000
Macroscopical mesorectum integrity, n (%)
1.000
Complete
14 (100)
13 (92.9)
Nearly complete
0 (0)
1 (7.1)
Incomplete
0 (0)
0 (0)
Values are presented as mean (SD) or number with percentage. PRM, proximal resection margin; DRM, distal resection margin; CRM, circumferential resection margin.
2.5 FINAL POINTS Robotics in surgery has evinced augmented interest as evidenced by “an exponential increase” (from 168 in the year 2000 to more than 2000 in 2014) in publications according to a research article that probed PubMed for “robot” and “surgery”. This boost in research linked to robotic surgeries is depicted in figure 2.5 below (© 2017 Dobbs, Cundy, Samarendra, Khan and Whitaker. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) or licensor are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms):
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Biorobotics in Medicine
What started off as Arthrobot that assisted patient positioning in an orthopedic surgery and orientation of a biopsy needle by Unimation Puma 200 has led now to the ZEUS robotic system that performed a long-distance cholecystectomy on a patient in France and the surgeon in New York as well as the Da Vinci robotic system that has been employed extensively (Zemmar, Lozano and Nelson, 2020). Further studies are ongoing to augment the accuracy during surgeries. “Here I come Cryogenic heart, skin a polished silver One thing I am glad of For this I thank my builder I can never rust” -LOUIS SHALAKO
Robots for Surgery
43
2.6 REFERENCES 1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
Ryan A. Beasley, “Medical Robots: Current Systems and Research Directions”, Journal of Robotics, vol. 2012, Article ID 401613, 14 pages, 2012. https://doi.org/10.1155/2012/401613 Tirth Ginoya, Yaser Maddahi, Kourosh Zareinia, “A Historical Review of Medical Robotic Platforms”, Journal of Robotics, vol. 2021, Article ID 6640031, 13 pages, 2021. https://doi.org/10.1155/2021/6640031 Sheetz KH, Claflin J, Dimick JB. Trends in the Adoption of Robotic Surgery for Common Surgical Procedures. JAMA Netw Open. 2020;3(1):e1918911. doi:10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2019.18911 Dobbs TD, Cundy O, Samarendra H, Khan K and Whitaker IS (2017) A Systematic Review of the Role of Robotics in Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery—From Inception to the Future. Front. Surg. 4:66. doi: 10.3389/fsurg.2017.00066 Mederos MA, de Virgilio MJ, Shenoy R, et al. Comparison of Clinical Outcomes of Robot-Assisted, Video-Assisted, and Open Esophagectomy for Esophageal Cancer: A Systematic Review and Meta-analysis. JAMA Netw Open. 2021;4(11):e2129228. doi:10.1001/ jamanetworkopen.2021.29228 Zeng Y, Wang G, Li Z, Lin H, Zhu S and Yi B (2021) The Micro Hand S vs. da Vinci Surgical Robot-Assisted Surgery on Total Mesorectal Excision: Short-Term Outcomes Using Propensity Score Matching Analysis. Front. Surg. 8:656270. doi: 10.3389/fsurg.2021.656270 Zemmar, A., Lozano, A.M. & Nelson, B.J. The rise of robots in surgical environments during COVID-19. Nat Mach Intell 2, 566–572 (2020). https://doi.org/10.1038/s42256-020-00238-2
CHAPTER
3
Robots for Surgery Continued
“The Three Laws of Robotics: 1: A robot may not injure a human being or, through inaction, allow a human being to come to harm; 2: A robot must obey the orders given it by human beings except where such orders would conflict with the First Law; 3: A robot must protect its own existence as long as such protection does not conflict with the First or Second Law; The Zeroth Law: A robot may not harm humanity, or, by inaction, allow humanity to come to harm.” ― Isaac Asimov, I, Robot
Contents 3.1 Robotic Systems.................................................................................. 46 3.2 Feasibility of Robotic Surgery for Colorectal Cancer (CRC).................. 54 3.3 Maxillofacial Surgery: What is the Status?........................................... 60 3.4 Robots for Pediatric Surgery: Few Studies:........................................... 62 3.5 Hernia Repairs: A Comparison............................................................ 68 3.6 The Hope for Cerebral Palsy (CP)........................................................ 70 3.7 Final Points......................................................................................... 72 3.8 References.......................................................................................... 75
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3.1 ROBOTIC SYSTEMS A major roadblock in employing the gold standard laparoscopy notwithstanding its extensive use and advantages is the “fulcrum effect” i.e movement of the tip in a direction opposite to that of the operating surgeon. Another challenge is the adjustment of the 3D knowledge of anatomy necessitated by the surgeon into the 2D video feed presented by the system. Figure 3.1 below documents the fulcrum effect of laparoscopy (Gangemi A, Chang B, Bernante P, Poggioli G, 2021: © 2021 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/):
This has facilitated the entry of a slew of robotic-assisted surgery (RAS) approaches being explored for various arenas of medicine as depicted below in figure 3.2 (Kawashima, Kanno, and Tadano, 2019: Open Access: This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made. The Creative Commons Public Domain Dedication waiver (http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) applies to the data made available in this article, unless otherwise stated):
Robots for Surgery Continued
47
The first generation was inclusive of the voice-controlled Automated Endoscopic System for Optimal Positioning (AESOP) that circumvented an extra surgical assistant. Notwithstanding its extensive usage in urology and cardiology, a challenge was its inability to fit the operations of the surgeon. This led to the second-generation system like Zeus that possessed two additional manipulators facilitating the holding of the operating instruments along with an AESOP robotic scope. Subsequently, the da Vinci surgical system (third-generation) encompassed a patient’s cart with a surgeon’s console and a high-definition 3-dimensional visualization system that transmitted true-to-life stereoscopic images of the actual anatomy (Liu, Li, Shi et al, 2017). Figure 3.3 below illustrates a scheme of the setup in robotic surgery (Liu, HH, Li, LJ, Shi, B. et al, 2017: This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License. The images or other third party material in this article are included in the article’s Creative Commons license, unless indicated otherwise in the credit line; if the material is not included under the Creative Commons license, users will need to obtain permission from the license holder to reproduce the material. To view a copy of this license, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/):
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Biorobotics in Medicine
As an example, traditional laparoscopic approaches entail the surgeon operating the system in a standing position. In RAS, there is an option of a seated console also. Figure 3.4 below illustrates surgeon consoles in RAS: (A) da Vinci, (B) MiroSurge, (C) Revo-I (D) Senhence, (E) Versius seated and (F) standing (Longmore SK, Naik G, Gargiulo, 2020: © 2020 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/):
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49
Laparoscopy entails two types of robots: master-slave type and handheld forceps. There are 6-degrees-of-freedom (DOF) of motion in the master-slave surgical robot with a 2-DOF at the tip of the wrist joint and a 4-DOF arm. The master console facilitates the operation of the remote slave arms with the wrist tip to allow intuitive surgeries on the lines of the 6-DOF of the operating surgeon. An example of such a system is illustrated in figure 3.5 below. The system being worked upon by Riverfield Inc. entails a pneumatic drive on the slave-side to circumvent the cleaning and sterilization of electric sensors (Kawashima, Kanno, and Tadano, 2019: Open Access: This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/ by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made. The Creative Commons Public Domain Dedication waiver (http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) applies to the data made available in this article, unless otherwise stated):
Examples of such systems that have received FDA approval are the da Vinci surgical system (patent expired) and Zeus. Challenges are being worked on developing systems with haptics (Greek for “to touch”) and lower costs. Table 3.1 below documents a few master-slave surgical robots (Kawashima, Kanno, and Tadano, 2019: Open Access: This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http:// creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative
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Biorobotics in Medicine
Commons license, and indicate if changes were made. The Creative Commons Public Domain Dedication waiver (http://creativecommons.org/ publicdomain/zero/1.0/) applies to the data made available in this article, unless otherwise stated): Company
Target Disease Mechanism and Drive
Configuration
Status
Intuitive Surgical da MIS Multi-port Vinci Xi (USA)
Link + Electri- Master console and FDA approved cal motor slave patient cart Clinical use with four arms worldwide
TransEnterix Senhanse (USA)
Link + Electri- Master console FDA approved cal motor and separated slave robot arms
MIS Multi-port
CMR surgical Veri- MIS Multi-port sus (UK)
Link + Electri- Master console and Under developcal motor separated slave hu- ment man like robot arms
Meere Revo-I (Korea)
MIS Multi-port
Link + Electri- Master console and Clinical use in cal motor slave patient cart Korea with four arms
RiverField (Japan)
MIS Multi-port
Flexible joint + Master console and Under developPneumatic slave patient cart ment with arms
Intuitive Surgical da MIS Single-port Flexible joint + Master console and FDA approved Vinci Sp (USA) Electrical motor slave patient cart with single arm Titan Medical SPORT (Canada)
MIS Single-port Flexible joint + Master console and Under developElectrical motor slave patient cart ment with single arm
EndoMaster (Singa- NOTES Tranpore) soral surgery
Flexible joint + Master console and Clinical trial Electrical motor slave patient cart with single arm
Auris, Monarch Platform (USA)
Flexible joint + Master console and Clinical trial Electrical motor slave patient cart with single arm
NOTES Lung cancer
Hand-held robotic forceps are controlled with an interface on the forcep wrist joint at its tip and function on the same lines as that of traditional forceps. These systems are smaller than the master-slave robot due to the absence of a master console. An integrated robot has been developed with pneumatic actuators for 2-DOF robotic forceps supported by a 4-DOF passive holder. This system is depicted in figure 3.6 below (Kawashima, Kanno, and Tadano, 2019: Open Access: This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http:// creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use,
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51
distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made. The Creative Commons Public Domain Dedication waiver (http://creativecommons.org/ publicdomain/zero/1.0/) applies to the data made available in this article, unless otherwise stated):
Looking at the patient arms and carts, there is a single integrated cart with all instrument arms (SPRINT, da Vinci and Avatera systems, to name a few) and individual carts for each instrument arm (Versius, MiroSurge and Hugo systems, to name a few). These carts are summarized in table 3.2 below (Longmore SK, Naik G, Gargiulo, 2020: © 2020 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/): Key: Single = all arms attached to a single cart; Individual = each arm with a cart; N/A = information not available at time of writing; DOF = degrees of freedom; A = arms are mounted to the surgical table; B = one arm in each robot is used for the endoscope; E = under trocar column refers to the port size for the endoscope, where as other trocar sizes are for the instruments; S under trocar column refers to single port systems where the instruments and endoscope are inserted through the same trocar
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Biorobotics in Medicine
Robot
No. Arms
Instrument Arms B
DOF
Trocar
Cart Type
References
Avatera
4
3
6
5 mm
Single
[15,25,26]
da Vinci (except SP)
4
3
7
8 mm
Single
[16,18,49]
da Vinci SP
1
2
7
S 25 mm
Single
[20]
Hugo
4
3
N/A
N/A
Individual
[38]
MiroSurge
3
2
7
N/A
Individual A [29,63,82,101]
Revo-I
4
3
7
12 mm
Single
[17,21,22,23,24]
Senhence
4
3
7
I 5 mm E 10 mm
Individual
[8,11,12,13,14,37]
SPORT Surgical System
1
2
N/A
S 25 mm
Single
[42,44,45]
SPRINT
1
2
6
S 30 mm
Single
[40,41]
Versius
5
4
7
5 mm
Individual
[6,12,22,37,39,43]
Few carts have been depicted in figure 3.7 below: (A) da Vinci Xi B) da Vinci SP (C) Senhence (D) MiroSurge (E) Versius and (F) Revo-I (Longmore SK, Naik G, Gargiulo, 2020: © 2020 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/):
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53
A handle (serving as the surgeon’s interface of the device), a shaft and a tip all constitute traditional laparoscopic instruments. As outlined above, a fulcrum effect is created with the DOF lowered due to the insertion of the instrument into a patient via a trocar. Wrist-like robotic instruments can form a curved arc upon deflection and the others with the jaws within the wrist. Figure 3.8 below illustrates TOP: (A) Conventional laparoscopic instrument; (B) DOF of 5 in this instrument; (C) 6th degree of freedom derived from a curved instrument: F = fulcrum effect of trocars (Parente G, Thomas E, Cravano S, Di Mitri M, Vastano M, Gargano T, Cerasoli T, Ruspi F, Libri M, Lima M, 2021: © 2021 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/):
BOTTOM: Robotic devices: A) Radius Surgical System® (Tuebingen Scientific), (B) FlexDex® (FlexDex Surgical Inc.), (C) LaproFlex® (DEAM), (D) Intuitool® (UneMed), (E) ArtiSential® (LIVSMED) (Parente G, Thomas E, Cravano S, Di Mitri M, Vastano M, Gargano T, Cerasoli T, Ruspi F, Libri M, Lima M, 2021: © 2021 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/):
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3.2 FEASIBILITY OF ROBOTIC SURGERY FOR COLORECTAL CANCER (CRC) Researchers Peng, Li, Tang, Li, Li, Wu, Lu, Lin and Pan reported retrospective analyses of the treatment, complications and survival of 109 CRC patients (diagnosed as per the 8th edition American Joint Committee on Cancer (AJCC) staging) who underwent robotic surgery between June 2016 and May 2019 at Sun Yat-sen University Cancer Center (Guangzhou, China).
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55
Figure 3.9 below illustrates TOP: the total mesorectal excision (TME) surgeries conducted by five surgeons employing the da Vinci Surgical System (Intuitive Surgical Inc., Sunnyvale, CA, USA) (A) Operation room setup (B) Inferior mesenteric nerve (in white arrow) preservation (C) Hypogastric nerves (in black arrow) preservation (D) Pelvic plexus preservation (in blue arrow) (© 2021 Peng, Li, Tang, Li, Li, Wu, Lu, Lin and Pan. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms):
BOTTOM: Patient details (© 2021 Peng, Li, Tang, Li, Li, Wu, Lu, Lin and Pan. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms):
Biorobotics in Medicine
56
Variables
Total (n = 109) Sigmoid cancer Rectal cancer (n (n = 35) = 74)
Age [median (range), years] 59 (31–82)
60 (34–82)
57 (31–73)
Age > 65 years (n,%)
30 (27.5)
10 (28.6)
20 (27.0)
Male gender (n,%)
75 (68.8)
25 (71.4)
50 (67.6)
BMI (mean ± SD, kg/m2)
22.8 ± 3.0
22.7 ± 2.8
22.9 ± 3.2
15
35 (32.1)
35 (100)
0
11–15
13 (11.9)
0
13 (17.6)
Robots for Surgery Continued 6–10
35 (32.1)
0
35 (47.3)
≤5
26 (23.9)
0
26 (35.1)
I
17 (15.6)
4 (11.4)
13 (17.6)
II
43 (39.4)
15 (42.9)
28 (37.8)
III
45 (41.3)
15 (42.9)
30 (40.5)
IV
4 (3.7)
1 (2.9)
3 (4.1)
Neoadjuvant CRT (n,%)
37 (33.9)
0
37 (50.0)
Neoadjuvant chemotherapy (n,%)
4 (3.7)
0
4 (5.4)
57
Preoperative TNM stage (n,%)
BMI, body mass index; ASA, American Society of anesthesiologists; SD, standard deviation; DAV, inferior tumor margin from the anal verge; TNM stage, tumor-node-metastasis classification; CRT, chemoradiotherapy. Looking at the outcomes, there was no intraoperative ureteral injury or conversion to open or laparoscopic procedure. Post-operative mortality was not documented for 30 days and complications were seen in 10.1% with recovery in all following relevant intervention. These details post-robotic surgery are documented in table 3.3 below (© 2021 Peng, Li, Tang, Li, Li, Wu, Lu, Lin and Pan. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms):
Male
Female
Female
Male
Male
Male
Male
Male
Female
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
59
49
68
50
43
69
37
54
47
59
Rectum 6
Rectum 10
Sigmoid 28 colon
Rectum 1
Rectum 3
Rectum 5
Sigmoid 25 colon
Rectum 7
Rectum 6
Rectum 10
Yes
No
No
Yes
Yes
Yes
No
No
Yes
No
T3N0M1
T3N1M0
T3N2M0
T4N0M0
pCR
T3N0M0
T3N0M0
T3N0M0
pCR
T3N1M0
LAR
LAR
Sigmoidectomy
APR
APR
LAR
HAR
LAR
LAR
LAR
Male
T2N0M0
2
Yes
LAR
Rectum 4
Female
1
37
Types of operation
Order Gender Age Tumor DAV NA- Pathological (years) location (cm) CRT stage
Complication detected on POD (days)
3
6
3
3
5
5
Anastomotic 5 leakage
Anastomotic 6 leakage
Anastomotic 1 bleeding
Delay wound 8 healing
Intestinal obstruction
Chylous leakage
Chylous leakage
Intestinal obstruction
Intestinal obstruction
Pelvic hemorrhage
Anastomotic 2 leakage, Intestinal obstruction
Complication
Invention LOS after suroutcome gery (day)
Recovery 24
Operation
Recovery 11
Conservative treat- Recovery 24 ment
Conservative treat- Recovery 10 ment
Conservative treat- Recovery 30 ment
Operation
Conservative treat- Recovery 9 ment
Conservative treat- Recovery 10 ment
Conservative treat- Recovery 12 ment
Conservative treat- Recovery 12 ment
Conservative treat- Recovery 14 ment
Conservative treat- Recovery 12 ment
Invention
Alive with tumor
Alive (NED)
Alive (NED)
Alive (NED)
Alive (NED)
Alive (NED)
Alive (NED)
Alive (NED)
Alive (NED)
Alive (NED)
Alive (NED)
Survial status
58 Biorobotics in Medicine
Robots for Surgery Continued Variables
Total (n = 109 ,%)
Sigmoidectomy + HAR (n = 48,%)
LAR (n = 45,%)
APR (n = 16,%)
LOS after surgery [median (range), days]
7 (4–30)
7 (4–12)
7 (4–24)
8 (6–30)
30 day mortality
0
0
0
0
Postoperative complication
11 (10.1)
2 (4.2)
7 (15.6)
2 (12.5)
Anastomotic leakage
3 (2.8)
0
3 (6.7)
0
Anastomotic bleeding
1 (0.9)
1 (2.1)
0
0
Pelvic hemorrhage
1 (0.9)
0
1 (2.2)
0
Intestinal obstruction
4 (3.7)
0
3 (6.7)
1 (6.3)
Chylous leakage
2 (1.8)
1 (2.1)
1 (2.2)
0
Delay wound healing
1 (0.9)
0
0
1 (6.3)
Defecated dysfunction
38 (34.9)
9 (18.8)
29 (64.4)
0
Urinary dysfunction
5 (4.6)
0
1 (2.2)
4 (25.0)
Sexual dysfunction
8 (7.3)
0
4 (8.9)
4 (25.0)
Alive (NED)
102 (93.6)
45 (93.8)
41 (91.1)
16 (100)
Alive with tumor
6 (5.5)
2 (4.2)
4 (8.9)
0
Death due to tumor
1 (0.9)
1 (2.1)
0
0
Local recurrence
1 (0.9)
1 (2.1)
0
0
Distant metastasis
5 (4.6)
2 (4.2)
3 (6.7)
0
59
HAR, high anterior resection; LAR, low anterior resection; APR, abdominoperineal resection; LOS, length of stay; NED, no evidence of disease. 93.6% of the patients were alive over the median follow-up of 17 months (1–37 months) with overall survival of 97.2% and disease-free survival (DFS) of 92.9% in non-metastatic patients (n = 104). Overall, the researchers presented the “remarkable surgical advantages of robotic surgery” in CRC given the increased magnification within mesorectal edema for resection facilitating more efficient surgeries. The survival data are depicted in figure 3.10 below (A) Net 2-year overall survival (B) 2-year disease-free survival in non-metastatic patients. (C) 2-year disease-free survival as per the pathologic stage (© 2021 Peng, Li, Tang, Li, Li, Wu, Lu, Lin and Pan. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No
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Biorobotics in Medicine
use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms):
3.3 MAXILLOFACIAL SURGERY: WHAT IS THE STATUS? A quest is on to facilitate minimally invasive surgery (MIS) in maxillofacial surgery given the impact of transmandibular or a transpharyngeal incisions in conventional approaches for this part of the body such as impaired speech and disfigurement. Early work in 2005 first reported vallecular cyst excision employing transoral robotic surgery (TORS) in maxillofacial surgery by McLeod and Melder to later receive FDA approval for oropharyngeal cancer (T1 and T2 stages). Given the promise of lowered tremor, precise movements and lower cosmetic disfigurement, robotic assistance is being probed for maxillofacial surgery. Table 3.4 below documents the status and potential of robotic surgery for head and neck malignancies as documented by Liu HH., Li LJ and Shi B. et al, Int J Oral Sci, 2017(This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License. The images or other third party material in this article are included in the article’s Creative Commons license, unless indicated otherwise in the credit line; if the material is not
Robots for Surgery Continued
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included under the Creative Commons license, users will need to obtain permission from the license holder to reproduce the material. To view a copy of this license, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/): Patients
Advantages
Limitations
Future
Head and neck neoplasms resection Upper aerodigestive tract tumor 16–65
In common: decreased damage to surrounding tissues; superior function recovery, better oncologic control and lower morbidity than conventional open surgery as well as radiochemical therapy; excellent aesthetics
In common: long surgical duration; lack of specific instruments (sharp instrumentation); lack of haptic feedback, and expensive
In common: realization of haptic feedback; bimanual operation and improvement of sharp instruments
Parapharyngeal spcae tumor 36, 61, 73–75 Thyroid gland tumor and mediastinal parathyroid77–89
Upper aerodigestive tract tumor: high effectiveness in detection of unknown primary tumors
Thyroidectomy: long hospitalization and considerable duration of drainage
Thyroidectomy: modified surgical approach to reduce the extent of the flap
Salivary glands tumor 90–95 Neck dissection 96–106
Thyroidectomy: easy to ligate the tract after carefully tracing it
Flap reconstruction: combination of robotic surgery and virtual surgical planning
Post-ablative defect Neck dissection: low reconstruction 17, 40, risk of lymph-edema and 60, 62, 107–109 lymph node recurrence Flap reconstruction: high survival rate
Table 3.5 below documents the status and potential of robotic surgery for other surgeries of the head and neck as documented by Liu HH., Li LJ and Shi B. et al, Int J Oral Sci, 2017(This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License. The images or other third party material in this article are included in the article’s Creative Commons license, unless indicated otherwise in the credit line; if the material is not included under the Creative Commons license, users will need to obtain permission from the license holder to reproduce the material. To view a copy of this license, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/):
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Biorobotics in Medicine
Patients
Advantages
Limitations
Future
Lip and palate cleft 110–111
Low damage to the vascularization and related innervation of surrounding muscles, quick function recovery
Long surgical duration
More high-quality clinical investigation
Maxillofacial fracture
Insufficient data
Insufficient data Specific design of related robotic surgical system
Craniofacial asymmetry 114–115
Insufficient data
Insufficient data Transition from theoretical feasibility to clinical application
OSAS: obstructive sleep apnea syndrome 117–128
Low intropetative bleeding and tracheotomy, decreased postoperative pain, hospital stay as well as incidence of dysphagia
Unstable cure rate varies from 45% to 90%, significant postoperative lingual oedema and transient hypogeusia
Combination of robotic resection of BOT and conventional surgery like uvulopalatopharyngoplasty or sphincter pharyngoplasty
In common; minimal damage to surrounding normal tissues as well as speech and swallow function; excellent aesthetics
Laryngeal lefts: unsatisfactory cure rate
Laryngeal lefts: application of specific miniaturized instruments to obtain enough surgical space
Others Laryngeal clefts 129
Laryngocele 130 Laryngocele: short operative time Ectopic lingual thyroid 131–133
Ectopic lingual thyroid: short operative time and low recurrence
Ptyalolithiasis 134–135
Ptyalolithiasis: high cure rate and low lingual nerve damage rate
3.4 ROBOTS FOR PEDIATRIC SURGERY: FEW STUDIES: 0Preliminary usage of ArtiSential®, an articulated device produced by Livsmed in two case studies at Pediatric Surgery Department, IRCCS Sant’Orsola-Malpighi University Hospital and Minimally Invasive and Robotic Pediatric Surgery Center (MISCBO), Alma Mater Studiorum— University of Bologna, Italy was documented in the Children journal by Parente and team (2021). The first was thoracoscopic thymectomy on a 14-year-old boy with Myasthenia Gravis. The authors reported minimal
Robots for Surgery Continued
63
bleeding and no complications in the use of ArtiSential® that was employed to address the limited space of the hemithorax. The second example was hepatic lymphangioma debulking in a 9-year-old boy aimed at augmented maneuvering in the confined space of the liver employing the robotic system. Figure 3.11 below illustrates the use of a robotic system in pediatric surgery for thoracoscopic thymectomy (A to C documenting the augmented DOFs in the limited space) and hepatic lymphangioma debulking (D-E with indocyanine green) (Parente G, Thomas E, Cravano S, Di Mitri M, Vastano M, Gargano T, Cerasoli T, Ruspi F, Libri M, Lima M, 2021: © 2021 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/):
Looking at urology, Sheth and Koh (2019) have documented robotic platforms for potential usage in pediatric patients (Copyright © 2019 Sheth and Koh. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms):
64
Biorobotics in Medicine
Company
Location
Robotic system Approach
Intuitive surgical
Sunnyvale, CA
Da Vinci Surgical Laparoscopic System LESS
TransEnterix
Morrisville, NC
SenhanceTM
Laparoscopy
Medrobotics Corp
Raynham, MA
Flex ®
Transoral
Cambridge Medical Robotics Ltd.
Cambridge, UK
Versius
Titan Medical Inc.
Toronto, ON
TransEnterix
Morrisville, NC
Status
Camera
Robotic segments
DOF
Haptic Additional features feedback
Commercially available
2 HD-3D
4
7
None
Tremor filtration
FDA anticipated
HD-3D (eye-tracking) 3
7
Present
Navigation, eye-tracking camera control system, individual robotic carts
Commercially available
HD-2D (semirigid or flexible)
2
180◦
None
Core flexible, steerable scope that becomes rigid once positioned
Laparoscopic
FDA validation
HD-3D
Up to 5 (modular)
7
Present
Force and position measurements > 1000x/second, up to 5 arms, lightweight
SPORTTM
LESS
FDA pending
HD-3D
1
Multiple None
Singe incisions, multi-articulated instruments, single arm mobile cart
SurgiBotTM
LESS
FDA denied, marketing in China
HD-3D
2
6
Internal triangulation
None
4
German Aeurospace Center (DLR)
Oberpfaffenhogen-Weßling Mirosurge
Laparoscopy
Commercially available (not US)
HD-3D
3–5
7
Present
Easy adaptation of MIRO arms
Medtronic
Minneapolis, MN
Hugo
Laparoscopic
Development
–
–
–
–
Flexible use—mass utilization to decrease cost
Nanyang Technological University
Singapore
MASTER
NOTES
Clinical Trial
2D endoscope
2
9
Present
For NOTES allows smaller instruments with larger forces, reconstruction navigation
BIOTRONIK
Berlin, Germany
9
NOTES
Commercially available (not US)
N/A
1
None
Use in ureteroscopy and endovascular procedures
HominisTM
Laparoscopic LESS NOTES
Development
–
Humanoid 360◦ shaped arms
–
Humanoid shaped robotics arms
Virtual Incision and CAST Omaha, NA (Omaha, NA)
Miniature in vivo Advanced robot (MIVR)
Development
HD—flexible tip
2
6
None
Miniaturized unit artificial intelligence + machine learning
J&J/Alphabet
Verb Surgical
Advanced
Development
–
–
–
-
“Surgery 4.0”—digital surgery combining robotics with data-driven machine learning
Mountain View, CA
Morales-López, Pérez-Marchán and Pérez Brayfield (2019) reviewed the potential of robotic-assisted laparoscopic pyeloplasty (RALP): considered as the most ubiquitously reported robotic procedure in children as of now. While its acceptance and safety have been the plus points, the elevated costs and increased hospital stays warrant further fine-tuning. Table 3.6 below documents the literature on robotic-assisted laparoscopic pyeloplasty (Copyright © 2019 Morales-López, Pérez-Marchán and Pérez Brayfield. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms):
Robotic Surgery Evolution in Pediatric Urology
July 2019 | Volume 7 | Article 259
ViaCath
Memic Innovative Surgery Israel
Sheth and Koh
Frontiers in Pediatrics | www.frontiersin.org
TABLE 1 | Comparison of da Vinci surgical and new robotic systems.
Morales-López et al. Morales-López et al.
Pediatric Robotic Assisted Pyeloplasty
Pediatric Robotic Assisted Pyeloplasty Robots for Surgery Continued 65
TABLE 1 | Series of reported robotic-assisted laparoscopic pyeloplasty cases. TABLE 1 | Series of reported robotic-assisted laparoscopic pyeloplasty cases. Author Author
Procedure Procedure
Kutikov et al. (15) Kutikov et al. (15) Avery et al. (16) Avery et al. (16) Asensio et al. (17) Asensio et al. (17) Olsen et al. (18) Olsen et al. (18) Minnillo et al. (19) Minnillo et al. (19) Singh et al. (20) Singh et al. (20) Atug et al. (21) Atug et al. (21) Franco et al. (22) Franco et al. (22) Perez-Brayfield Perez-Brayfield
RALP RALP RALP RALP RALP RALP RALP RALP RALP RALP RALP RALP RALP RALP RALP RALP RALP RALP
# of pts # of pts
Mean age Mean age (yrs) (yrs)
Laterality Laterality UPJ UPJ
Approach Approach
9 9 60 60 5 5 65 65 155 155 34 34 7 7 15 15 41 41
0.47 0.47 0.61 0.61 10.59 10.59 7.9 7.9 10.5 10.5 12 12 13 13 11.9 11.9 10.2 10.2
n/a n/a Bilateral (2) Bilateral (2) n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a Right (14), Right (14), Left (27) Left (27)
Transperitoneal Transperitoneal Transperitoneal Transperitoneal Transperitoneal Transperitoneal Retroperitoneal Retroperitoneal n/a n/a n/a n/a Transperitoneal Transperitoneal Transperitoneal Transperitoneal Trans Trans
Mean op Mean op time (min) time (min)
Hospital Hospital stay (days) stay (days)
Complications Complications
Success Success rate (%) rate (%)
122.8 122.8 232 232 144 144 146 146 198.5 198.5 105 105 184 184 223 223 135 135
1.4 1.4 1 1 2.6 2.6 2 2 1.9 1.9 n/a n/a 1.2 1.2 n/a n/a 1.5 1.5
n/a n/a 7 7 n/a n/a 11 11 17 17 2 2 1 1 4 4 5 5
78 78 91 91 100 100 100 100 96 96 97 97 100 100 n/a n/a 95% 95%
Complications Complications
Success Success rate (%) rate (%)
TABLE 2 | Series of reported cases comparing open pyeloplasty, laparoscopic pyeloplasty, and robotic-assisted laparoscopic pyeloplasty. TABLE 2 | Series of reported cases comparing open pyeloplasty, laparoscopic pyeloplasty, and robotic-assisted laparoscopic pyeloplasty. Author Author
Procedure Procedure (OP, LAP, (OP, LAP, RALP) RALP)
Barbosa et al. (23) Barbosa et al. (23) Yee et al. (24) Yee et al. (24) Subotic et al. (25) Subotic et(26) al. (25) Lee et al. Lee et al. (26) Song et al. (27) Song et al. (27)
Cundy et al. (28) Cundy et al. (28)
Salö et al. (29) Salö et al. (29)
# of # of patients patients
Mean age Mean (yrs)age (yrs)
RALP RALP
58 58
7.2 7.2
OP OP RALP
154 154 8
1.2 1.2 11.5
RALP OP OP OP OP RALP
88 88
11.5 9.8 9.8 9.8
8 33 33 33
9.8 7.9 7.9 7.6
OP
33 30 30
7.6 8.5 8.5
LP LP
30 30
10.5 10.5
RALP OP OP OP
Laterality Laterality UPJ UPJ
Approach Approach
Bilateral Bilateral (10) (10) n/a
n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a (8), Right Right (8), Left (22) Left (22) Right (6), Right (6), Left (24) Left (24) Right (3),
Mean Mean operative operative time (min) time (min)
Hospital Hospital stay (days) stay (days)
Transperitoneal Transperitoneal
n/a n/a
n/a n/a
1
n/a n/a n/a
n/a n/a 363
n/a n/a 2.4
7
n/a n/a n/a n/a
363 248 248 248
2.4 3.3 3.3 3.3
n/a n/a n/a n/a
248 219 219 181
3.3 2.3 2.3 3.5
n/a Transperitoneal Transperitoneal
181 192.5 192.5
3.5 6.6 6.6
Transperitoneal Transperitoneal
197.4 197.4
5.8 5.8
RALP RALP
10 10
11 11
OP vs. OP vs. RALP RALP LP vs.
157,166 157,166
7, 8.1 7, 8.1
Right Left (7)(3), Left (7) n/a n/a
n/a n/a
97, 151 97, 151
6.5, 10 6.5, 10
n/a n/a
n/a n/a
Right (38), Left (54) Right (38), Left (54) Right (10), Left (21) Right (10), Left (21)
Retro (15), Trans Retro(16) (15), Trans (16)
RALP LP vs. RALP OP
OP
92 92
6.2 6.2
RALP RALP
31 31
8.3 8.3
Transperitoneal Transperitoneal
n/a n/a
1 17 01 00 10 01 40
254.1 254.1
3.2 3.2 RALP (shorter RALP HS)(shorter HS) RALP (shorter
diff. no significant diff. 167
HS)(shorter RALP HS) 4.4
167
4.4
249 249
3.4 3.4
67.9 67.9 100
100 87.5 87.5 87.5 87.5 94 10094 100 96.7
4
96.7
4
89.7 89.7
4
RALP (Longer RALP OT)(Longer OT) no significant
76.9 76.9
1
1
100 100
5, 9 5, 9
88.5, 87.3 88.5, 87.3
10, 10 10, 10
96.9, 99.3 96.9, 99.3
25 25
92 92
9
94 94
9
COSTS AND CONSIDERATIONS TheAND utility of pediatric COSTS CONSIDERATIONS
supplies being the largest contributor to the rising cost. For surgery with indocyanine greenvs.to(ICG)-guided supplies being comparing the largestlaparoscopic contributor the rising cost. For example, when robotic approaches example, when comparing vs.$3,000. robotic approaches there was an average increase laparoscopic in costs of over near-infrared fluorescence (NIRF) wasthere documented by Esposito and team was an average increase in costs of over $3,000. In another study, Varda et al. again demonstrated an increased In another study, Varda et al. again an increased utilization of the RALP in children (33).demonstrated They showed that within (2020) in Frontiers in pediatrics. The researchers probed the results of autilization 12-year period a persistent cost when of thethere RALPwas in children (33).higher They showed thatRALP within a 12-year period there waspyeloplasty. a persistent The higher cost when was compared with open increased costRALP in 76 various laparoscopic and/or roboticRALP procedures on persisted pediatric patients to was compared open pyeloplasty. increased cost in over open with pyeloplasty as The the cost of operating RALPequipment over openin pyeloplasty persisted as thehigh cost even of operating room for robotic cases remained when suggest the utility of this combined approach excising tumors, partial considering the costfor associated hospital stays related room equipment robotic with caseslonger remained high even when open Highassociated volumes with of RALP be required for considering the cost longermay hospital stays related nephrectomy, difficult cholecystectomytoinstitutions andsurgery. varicocele. to profit from the procedures as total investment Several studies have delved into the evaluation of costs of the Several studies have thestudies evaluation of costs of the treatment options fordelved UPJO.into Some have even suggested treatment forin UPJO. studies even suggested a 2.7 timeoptions increase cost Some in RALP as have compared to other amodalities 2.7 time ofincrease in cost in RALP to other UPJO (30). In 2017 Jacobsasetcompared al. (31) published modalities of UPJO In 2017 Jacobsshowing et al. (31) a cost analysis study(30). in adult patients fairlypublished similar acosts costfor analysis study in adult patients showing fairly similar open pyeloplasty ($22,421) as compared to minimally costs for pyeloplasty open pyeloplasty ($22,421) compared to minimally invasive ($22,843). Vardaasand colleagues evaluated invasive pyeloplasty ($22,843). Varda and colleagues the national trends of UPJO treatment modalities in evaluated children the national trends of of the UPJO treatment in children including analysis available datamodalities on cost (32). They reported evidence of including analysis ofofantheincreasing availabletrend data toward on costutilization (32). They minimallyevidence invasiveofpyeloplasty overtrend opentoward pyeloplasty. In the reported an increasing utilization of study, minimally invasive modalities an increased costInwith minimally invasive pyeloplasty overhad open pyeloplasty. the a significant increase in price related had to RALP. Operating study, minimally invasive modalities an increased costroom with were byincrease far the in greatest contributor to costs, with robotic acosts significant price related to RALP. Operating room costs were by far the greatest contributor to costs, with robotic
to open surgery. High volumes of RALP may be required for
cost is divided between increased number of procedures institutions to profit the procedures as total investment Figure 3.12 below illustrates the utility offromanrobotic surgery with performed. An estimated to five robotic cases week cost is divided between three an increased number of per procedures are necessaryAn to estimated profit fromthree robotic surgery, which a clear performed. to five robotic casesis per week indocyanine green (ICG)-guided near-infrared fluorescence (NIRF) for limitation for pediatric centers mattersurgery, their sizewhich (34). Reaching are necessary to profit fromno robotic is a clear limitation for pediatric centers no matter their size (34). Reaching augmented discernment and ease: TOP: robot-assisted removal of five ovarian tumors in 11-16-year-old patient: the time taken was 78 ± 12 min and no complications were documented A) tumor mass identified B) resection edges C) uterus vascularization post-resection (Copyright © 2020 Esposito, Settimi, Del Conte, Cerulo, Coppola, Farina, Crocetto, Ricciardi, Esposito and Escolino. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No Frontiers in Pediatrics | www.frontiersin.org
Frontiers in Pediatrics | www.frontiersin.org
4
4
January 2019 | Volume 7 | Article 4
January 2019 | Volume 7 | Article 4
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Biorobotics in Medicine
use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms):
BOTTOM: Varicocele repair in 8-18-year-olds by laparoscopic (n = 37) and robot-assisted (n = 3) left varicocelectomy with no adverse effects up to 24 months (Copyright © 2020 Esposito, Settimi, Del Conte, Cerulo, Coppola, Farina, Crocetto, Ricciardi, Esposito and Escolino. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms):
Navarrete Arellano and Garibay González (2019) presented the impact of robot-assisted laparoscopic and thoracoscopic surgery (RALTS) in pediatric surgery between March 2015 and March 2018 in a prospective, observational, and longitudinal study in Frontiers in Pediatrics. Of 186 RALTS approaches (41 different surgical techniques) on 147 pediatric patients, the safety
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and effectiveness for even complex surgeries like thoracic/ hepatobiliary procedures emerged with the authors documenting the promise of more robust robotic assistance programs. The details of the approaches entailed in this work are documented in table 3.7 below (Copyright © 2019 Navarrete Arellano and Garibay González. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms): Area
n (%)
Procedures
UROLOGICAL Pyeloplasty
19
Nephrectomy
18
Ureteral reimplantation
17
Mitrofanoff
6
Nephroureterectomy
6
Varicocelectomy
5
Release of extrinsic obstruction UP union
3
Inguinal hernia repair
3
Desderivation of ureterostomy and ureteral reimplantation
2
Cystolithotomy
2
Various*
10
Subtotal
91 (48.92)
Primary fundoplication
38
Redo fundoplication
13
Cholecystectomy
11
Gastrostomy
9
GI-HB
Biliodigestive
6
Operation of malone
2
Various
5
Subtotal
84 (45.16)
**
***
THORACIC
68
Biorobotics in Medicine Diaphragmatic plication
3
Lobectomy
2
Bronchogenic cyst excision
1
Subtotal
6 (3.23)
Oncological Mediastinal teratoma
1
Resection of carcinoid in stomach
1 (adult)
Left radical nephrectomy
1
Retroperitoneal lipoma
1
Left adrenalectomy (pheochromocytoma)
1
Subtotal
5 (2.69)
Ureteroureterostomy, augmentation cystoplasty, bladder neck closure, heminephrectomy with ureterectomy, perirenal abscess drainage, colostomy closure, enterovesical fistula closure, review of Mitrofanoff, ureterostomy, and ureteropyelography. *
Roux-en-Y hepaticojejuno reconstruction. **
(5)
or
portojejuno
(1)
anastomosis
Duodenoplasty with adherensiolysis, extraction of gastric trichobezoar, drainage, and debridement of recurrent retrohepatic abscess postappendectomy, gastrojejunoanastomosis with Roux-en-Y and splenectomy. ***
3.5 HERNIA REPAIRS: A COMPARISON Nguyen, David, Shiozaki et al (2021) compared standard open repair (SOR) or robotic-assisted repair (RAR) for hernia repairs between September 2016 and February 2017 on 43 patients (16 SOR versus 27 RAR) whose BMI, age, gender, diabetes and hernia size were comparable. While the RAR group documented lowered estimated blood loss (EBL) and hospital stay, the operative times were longer as opposed to the OAR group. Despite this prolonging of the operative time, patient outcomes were improved for complex ventral hernia repairs, according to the authors. The results of standard open repair (SOR) or robotic-assisted repair (RAR) for hernia repairs are documented in table 3.8 below (Nguyen, B., David, B., Shiozaki, T. et al, 2021: Open Access: This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License, which permits use, sharing, adaptation, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, as long as you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons licence, and indicate if
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changes were made. The images or other third party material in this article are included in the article’s Creative Commons licence, unless indicated otherwise in a credit line to the material. If material is not included in the article’s Creative Commons licence and your intended use is not permitted by statutory regulation or exceeds the permitted use, you will need to obtain permission directly from the copyright holder. To view a copy of this licence, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/): Key: SOR standard open repair, RAR robotic assisted repair, BMI body mass index, DVT deep vein thrombosis, UTI urinary tract infection, SSI surgical site infection SOR n = 16
RAR n = 27
P-Value
55.4 ± 12.4
58.6 ± 10.4
0.367
Male
4 (25%)
13 (48%)
0.133
Female
12 (75%)
14 (52%)
Caucasian
16 (100%)
24 (89%)
African American
0 (0%)
3 (11%)
BMI
32.2 ± 6.4
33.3 ± 5.5
0.558
Diabetes
3 (19%)
7 (26%)
0.719
Operative time
206.5
272.1
0.001
Estimated blood loss
146.9 ± 75.8
43.0 ± 85.1