Perioperative and midterm outcomes of emergent robotic repair of incarcerated ventral and incisional hernia

AbstractThe literature  surrounding emergent robotic ventral hernia repair (RVHR) is scarce. We aimed to present the results of 6 years of experience of RVHR in the emergency setting. Data were retrospectively analyzed from patients who underwent RVHR in an emergent setting between 2013 and 2019. Complications were ass essed with the Clavien-Dindo (CD) and Comprehensive Complication Index (CCI®) scoring systems. Kaplan –Meier’s time-to-event analysis was performed to calculate freedom-of-recurrence. Out of 589 patients who underwent RVHR, 34 patients were included. Median APACHE-II scores were 6.5. The average skin-to-skin time was 139 min. 7/34(20.5%) patients experienced minor complications (CD-grades I–I I) and 4/34 (11.7%) patients experienced major complications (CD-grades III–IV). CCI® scores ranged from 0 –42.4. Only one (2.9%) patient experienced hernia recurrence. The mean postoperative follow-up was 20.5 (range 1.6–56.3) months. Emergent RVHR showed promising results in terms of midterm outcomes and overall feasibility. RVHR appears to be effective in emergency settings, however, further multi center studies with long-term follow-up are needed.
Source: Journal of Robotic Surgery - Category: Surgery Source Type: research