A systematic review of robotic breast surgery versus open surgery

J Robot Surg. 2023 Dec;17(6):2583-2596. doi: 10.1007/s11701-023-01698-5. Epub 2023 Aug 25.

Abstract

Robotic-assisted breast surgery (RABS) is controversial. We systematically reviewed the evidence about RABS, comparing it to open conventional breast surgery (CBS). Following prospective registration (osf.io/97ewt), a search was performed in January 2023, without time or language restrictions, through bibliographic databases (PubMed, Web of Science, EMBASE, Scopus, Trip database and CDSR) and grey literature. Quality was assessed in duplicate using Qualsyst criteria (score range 0.0-1.0); reviewer agreement was 98%. The 16 selected studies (total patients: 334,804) had overall high quality (mean score 0.82; range 0.68-0.91). Nine of 16 (56.3%) were cohort studies, 2/16 (12.5%) RCTs, and 5/16 (31.3%) case-control studies. Taking p < 0.05 as the significance threshold, RABS versus CBS was better in aesthetic results and patient satisfaction (10/11 studies; 90%), was surgically costly (4/4 studies; 100%), time-consuming (9/13 studies; 69%), and less painful in the first 6-24 h (2/2 studies; 100%) and without statistically significant differences in complication rates (10/12 studies; 83%) or short-term oncological outcomes (10/10 studies; 100%). Surgical time could be dramatically reduced by training surgical teams, reaching no significant differences between approaches (p = 0.120). RABS was shown to be feasible and safe. The advantages of RABS and long-term outcomes need further research.

Keywords: Breast cancer surgery; Conventional breast surgery; Minimal access breast surgery; Minimal invasive breast surgery; Robotic-assisted breast surgery.

Publication types

  • Systematic Review
  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Breast Neoplasms* / surgery
  • Female
  • Humans
  • Patient Satisfaction
  • Prospective Studies
  • Robotic Surgical Procedures* / methods
  • Robotics*