Transfer of open and laparoscopic skills to robotic surgery: a systematic review
Baldev Chahal
1
,
Abdullatif Aydın
1, 2
,
Mohammad S Ali Amin
3
,
Kelly Ong
4
,
Azhar Khan
2, 5
,
Muhammad Shamim Khan
5
,
Kamran Ahmed
1, 2
,
Prokar Dasgupta
1, 5
2
Department of Urology, King’s College Hospital NHS Foundation Trust, London, UK
|
4
Department of Urology, Princess Royal University Hospital, Orpington, UK
|
5
Urology Centre, Guy’s and St, Thomas’ NHS Foundation Trust, London, UK
|
Publication type: Journal Article
Publication date: 2022-11-22
scimago Q1
wos Q1
SJR: 0.764
CiteScore: 3.9
Impact factor: 3.0
ISSN: 18632483, 18632491
PubMed ID:
36418717
Surgery
Health Informatics
Abstract
Due to its advantages over open surgery and conventional laparoscopy, uptake of robot-assisted surgery has rapidly increased. It is important to know whether the existing open or laparoscopic skills of robotic novices shorten the robotic surgery learning curve, potentially reducing the amount of training required. This systematic review aims to assess psychomotor skill transfer to the robot in clinical and simulated settings. PubMed, EMBASE, Cochrane Library and Scopus databases were systematically searched in accordance with PRISMA guidelines from inception to August 2021 alongside website searching and citation chaining. Article screening, data extraction and quality assessment were undertaken by two independent reviewers. Outcomes included simulator performance metrics or in the case of clinical studies, peri- and post-operative metrics. Twenty-nine studies met the eligibility criteria. All studies were judged to be at high or moderate overall risk of bias. Results were narratively synthesised due to heterogeneity in study designs and outcome measures. Two of the three studies assessing open surgical skill transfer found evidence of successful skill transfer while nine of twenty-seven studies evaluating laparoscopic skill transfer found no evidence. Skill transfer from both modalities is most apparent when advanced robotic tasks are performed in the initial phase of the learning curve but quality and methodological limitations of the existing literature prevent definitive conclusions. The impact of incorporating laparoscopic simulation into robotic training curricula and on the cost effectiveness of training should be investigated.
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Total citations:
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Citations from 2024:
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(70.84%)
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GOST
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Chahal B. et al. Transfer of open and laparoscopic skills to robotic surgery: a systematic review // Journal of Robotic Surgery. 2022. Vol. 17. No. 4.
GOST all authors (up to 50)
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Chahal B., Aydın A., Amin M. S. A., Ong K., Khan A., Khan M. S., Ahmed K., Dasgupta P. Transfer of open and laparoscopic skills to robotic surgery: a systematic review // Journal of Robotic Surgery. 2022. Vol. 17. No. 4.
Cite this
RIS
Copy
TY - JOUR
DO - 10.1007/s11701-022-01492-9
UR - https://doi.org/10.1007/s11701-022-01492-9
TI - Transfer of open and laparoscopic skills to robotic surgery: a systematic review
T2 - Journal of Robotic Surgery
AU - Chahal, Baldev
AU - Aydın, Abdullatif
AU - Amin, Mohammad S Ali
AU - Ong, Kelly
AU - Khan, Azhar
AU - Khan, Muhammad Shamim
AU - Ahmed, Kamran
AU - Dasgupta, Prokar
PY - 2022
DA - 2022/11/22
PB - Springer Nature
IS - 4
VL - 17
PMID - 36418717
SN - 1863-2483
SN - 1863-2491
ER -
Cite this
BibTex (up to 50 authors)
Copy
@article{2022_Chahal,
author = {Baldev Chahal and Abdullatif Aydın and Mohammad S Ali Amin and Kelly Ong and Azhar Khan and Muhammad Shamim Khan and Kamran Ahmed and Prokar Dasgupta},
title = {Transfer of open and laparoscopic skills to robotic surgery: a systematic review},
journal = {Journal of Robotic Surgery},
year = {2022},
volume = {17},
publisher = {Springer Nature},
month = {nov},
url = {https://doi.org/10.1007/s11701-022-01492-9},
number = {4},
doi = {10.1007/s11701-022-01492-9}
}