Background: The transaxillary robot-assisted technique constitutes an acceptable treatment option for patients requiring thyroidectomy. However, patients' attitudes toward this new technique have not yet been analyzed.
Methods: A sample of 596 randomly selected patients who underwent thyroidectomy between January 2000 and March 2010 was assessed. We evaluated patients' attitudes toward transaxillary robot-assisted thyroidectomy, taking into account the validated Patient Scar Assessment Questionnaire, the SF-36 Health Survey Questionnaire, and 11 sociodemographic and surgical patient characteristics.
Results: Only 11.6 % of the patients would prefer to have been treated with the transaxillary method. Most patients had concerns that it would be a more painful procedure (39.2 %), and they expressed satisfaction with the existing esthetic outcome (29.1 %); other concerns were that the robotic approach would be of longer duration (25.4 %) and at higher cost (15.5 %). Nevertheless, the worse the appearance of the neck scar the more preferable is the new method (p = 0.025), a result that holds true irrespective of patients' physical health, the invasive procedure attained (conventional or minimal), and the presence of postoperative complications, among other characteristics. Patients diagnosed with a benign or uncertain neoplasm (p = 0.022) and younger patients (p = 0.003) held a more positive view of the new method.
Conclusions: Patients who have undergone conventional thyroidectomy via the usual neck incision do not express a preference for the transaxillary method. The reasons given include various perceived disadvantages of the robotic procedure (increased pain, longer operative times, and higher cost). Younger patients, patients with poor appearance of their neck scar, and patients with benign thyroid pathology seem to hold a more positive attitude toward the robotic approach.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00268-013-2090-x | DOI Listing |
BMC Surg
March 2024
Department of Head and Neck Surgery, State Key Laboratory of Oncology in South China, Collaborative Innovation Center for Cancer Medicine, Sun Yat-sen University Cancer Center, 651 Dongfeng East Road, Guangzhou, Guangdong, 510060, P. R. China.
Purpose: Gasless robot-assisted transaxillary hemithyroidectomy (RATH) is regarded as an alternative surgical option for thyroid operations. However, the associated steep learning curve is a clinical concern. This study evaluated the learning curve of RATH for surgeons without experience of endoscopic surgery and the early surgical outcomes of RATH.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Robot Surg
January 2024
Department of Surgery, College of Medicine, The Catholic University of Korea, 222, Banpo-Daero, Seocho-Gu, 06591, Seoul, Republic of Korea.
Updates Surg
April 2024
Unit of General Surgery, Emergency and New Technologies of the Civil Hospital of Baggiovara, University Hospital of Modena, Modena, Italy.
Thyroid surgery is characterized by large volumes and typically affects a young female population. Mini-invasive or remote access surgical techniques are born driven by the desire to improve aesthetic outcomes of the traditional technique, following technological advances that have upset the surgical world in the last 20 years. In our multicenter, retrospective observational study, we first compared an endoscopic technique with a robotic one: minimally invasive video-assisted thyroidectomy (MIVAT) and robot-assisted transaxillary thyroidectomy (RATT).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Med Robot
August 2023
Department of Surgical, Medical, Molecular Pathology, and Critical Care, University of Pisa, Pisa, Italy.
Background: The use of robot-assisted transaxillary thyroidectomy (RATT) has rapidly spread in the last 2 decades, although it is mostly limited to Asian countries.
Method: We retrospectively enroled all patients with histologic diagnoses of thyroid cancer who underwent RATT at the University Hospital of Pisa from May 2012 to September 2020.
Results: The study included 242 patients; 128 (47%) underwent total thyroidectomy and 114 (53%) underwent thyroid lobectomy, among which 28 patients (24.
Updates Surg
September 2023
Endocrine Surgery Unit, Department of Surgical, Medical and Molecular Pathology and Critical Area, University of Pisa, Pisa, Italy.
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