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Robotic donor hepatectomy: a niche advancement or the way forward? A perspective from the world’s largest center
Author(s) -
Mark Sturdevant,
Ahmed S. Zidan,
Dieter C. Bröering
Publication year - 2022
Publication title -
hepatoma research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2454-2520
pISSN - 2394-5079
DOI - 10.20517/2394-5079.2021.111
Subject(s) - hepatectomy , medicine , invasive surgery , surgery , laparoscopy , robotic surgery , general surgery , resection
The application of minimally invasive liver surgery (MILS) in the field of living donor hepatectomy has been exceedingly slow, and its impact is limited to a handful of centers worldwide. Widespread adoption has been primarily hampered by the technical limitations of laparoscopy, namely rigid instrumentation, suboptimal optics, and a seemingly steep learning curve. These deficiencies are magnified in the donor hepatectomy operation wherein the parenchyma and vasculature must be handled atraumatically to produce a pristine allograft fit for implantation. Donor safety concerns and medicolegal ramifications are also cited as impediments to MILS in donor surgery. In 2013, our institution embraced a purely laparoscopic approach to living donor left lateral sectionectomy, and it quickly became our default technique. However, with donor hemi-hepatectomy, we gravitated to the robotic surgical system as our preferred modality. Herein, we describe our experience with minimally invasive donor hepatectomy, which we now universally offer to all living donors. Our extensive familiarity with robotic donor hepatectomy will provide the reader with an instructive perspective on the attributes and merits of the robotic approach. With appropriate collaboration and proctorship, we believe that the robotic platform will actualize a more rapid and widespread adoption than that experienced with the purely laparoscopic technique.

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