Artigo Revisado por pares

A Population-Based Study of 90-Day Hospital Cost and Utilization Associated With Robotic Surgery in Colon and Rectal Cancer

2019; Elsevier BV; Volume: 245; Linguagem: Inglês

10.1016/j.jss.2019.07.052

ISSN

1095-8673

Autores

Carla F. Justiniano, Adan Z. Becerra, Zhaomin Xu, Christopher T. Aquina, Courtney I. Boodry, Maria J. Schymura, Francis P. Boscoe, Katia Noyes, Larissa K. Temple, Fergal J. Fleming,

Tópico(s)

Diverticular Disease and Complications

Resumo

The role of robotic surgery in colorectal cancer remains contentious with most data arising from small, single-institution studies.Stage I-III colorectal cancer resections from 2008 to 2014 were identified in New York State. Propensity score-adjusted negative binomial models were used to compare cost and utilization between robotic, laparoscopic, and open resections.A total of 12,218 patients were identified. For colectomy, the robotic-to-open conversion rate was 3%, and the laparoscopic-to-open conversion rate was 13%. For rectal resection, the robotic-to-open conversion rate was 7% and the laparoscopic-to-open conversion rate was 32%. In intention-to-treat analysis, there was no significant difference in cost across the surgical approaches, both in overall and stratified analyses. Both laparoscopic and robotic approaches were associated with decreased 90-d hospital utilization compared with open surgery in intention-to-treat analyses.Robotic and laparoscopic colorectal cancer resections were not associated with a hospital cost benefit after 90 d compared with open but were associated with decreased hospital utilization. Conversion to open resection was common, and efforts should be made to prevent them. Future research should continue to measure how robotic and laparoscopic approaches can add value to the health care system.

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