At present, the application of extended radical surgery in hilar cholangiocarcinoma (hCCA) remained controversial. The author reviewed the relevant literatures published in recent years and combined with his own experience, preliminarily discussed the application value of extended radical surgery in hCCA, and believed that: for some strictly selected cases of hCCA, under the premise of ensuring patient safety, extended radical surgery was an important treatment method for hCCA patients to obtain R0 removal, and the survival status of patients was better than that of palliative surgery, but the indications need to be strictly mastered. For patients with hCCA, whether to adopt extended radical surgery and the specific scope of surgical resection should be based on the scope of lesions and the involved organs, tissues and blood vessels to implement an individualized surgical program on the premise of comprehensive evaluation and full preparation before surgery. Do not blindly carry out extended radical surgery.
ObjectiveThe aim of this study was to evaluate the safety and feasibility of robot-assisted surgery in pancreatic cancer.MethodRecent literatures related to robot-assisted surgery in treatment of pancreatic cancer compared with traditional open surgery or traditional laparoscopic surgery were collected to make an review.ResultsCompared with the traditional laparoscopic surgery, the robot-assisted surgery was expensive, with the obvious advantages in terms of anastomosis and reconstruction. Compared with the open operation, both robot-assisted pancreaticoduodenectomy and robot-assisted distal pancreatectomy had longer operation time, but the length of hospital stay and intraoperative blood loss were obviously shortened, robot-assisted distal pancreatectomy also had higher spleen preservation rate. Compared with the traditional laparoscopic distal pancreatectomy, the number of lymph node retrieved, R0 resection rate, and splenic preservation rate were also higher in the robot-assisted group. Simultaneously, robot-assisted total pancreatectomy and midsection pancreatectomy were deemed as safe in some high-volume centers.ConclusionsRobot-assisted pancreatic cancer surgery is safe and feasible, but many surgeries are restricted to a small number of high-volume medical centers, and most cases selected to undergo robot-assisted surgery are often early stage patients with small tumor size. A lot of efforts should be made and problems should be solved.