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      Clinical Outcomes of Robotic Surgery Compared to Conventional Surgical Approaches (Laparoscopic or Open) : A Systematic Overview of Reviews

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          Minimally Invasive versus Abdominal Radical Hysterectomy for Cervical Cancer

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            Effect of Robotic-Assisted vs Conventional Laparoscopic Surgery on Risk of Conversion to Open Laparotomy Among Patients Undergoing Resection for Rectal Cancer

            Robotic rectal cancer surgery is gaining popularity, but limited data are available regarding safety and efficacy.
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              No surgical innovation without evaluation: the IDEAL recommendations.

              Surgery and other invasive therapies are complex interventions, the assessment of which is challenged by factors that depend on operator, team, and setting, such as learning curves, quality variations, and perception of equipoise. We propose recommendations for the assessment of surgery based on a five-stage description of the surgical development process. We also encourage the widespread use of prospective databases and registries. Reports of new techniques should be registered as a professional duty, anonymously if necessary when outcomes are adverse. Case series studies should be replaced by prospective development studies for early technical modifications and by prospective research databases for later pre-trial evaluation. Protocols for these studies should be registered publicly. Statistical process control techniques can be useful in both early and late assessment. Randomised trials should be used whenever possible to investigate efficacy, but adequate pre-trial data are essential to allow power calculations, clarify the definition and indications of the intervention, and develop quality measures. Difficulties in doing randomised clinical trials should be addressed by measures to evaluate learning curves and alleviate equipoise problems. Alternative prospective designs, such as interrupted time series studies, should be used when randomised trials are not feasible. Established procedures should be monitored with prospective databases to analyse outcome variations and to identify late and rare events. Achievement of improved design, conduct, and reporting of surgical research will need concerted action by editors, funders of health care and research, regulatory bodies, and professional societies.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Annals of Surgery
                Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)
                0003-4932
                1528-1140
                2021
                March 2021
                May 8 2020
                : 273
                : 3
                : 467-473
                Article
                10.1097/SLA.0000000000003915
                32398482
                53542112-2cc9-4c62-933b-38aaa096dbe6
                © 2020
                History

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