Editorial


Conventional video-assisted thoracic surgery (VATS) vs. robotassisted lobectomy: where is the money?

Jari Räsänen, Ilkka Ilonen, Jarmo A. Salo

Abstract

The past 20 years have seen growing evidence for minimally invasive thoracic surgery, namely the widespread adoption of video-assisted thoracic surgery (VATS). The pinnacle of this procedure is the VATS lobectomy, which has thus far spawned multiple adaptations, such as robot-assisted, single-port and subxiphoidal approaches to mention only a few (1-3). Despite much higher adoption rate and more advanced technology, boundaries to conducting safe, efficient, reliably reproducible, minimally invasive surgery persist. Currently, the single-port approach offers no reported benefits over the conventional VATS lobectomy (4,5). Likewise, the robot-assisted VATS approach is reportedly non-inferior to that of conventional VATS (6). Debate about the rationality of the robot-assisted VATS approach is ongoing, as many surgeons feels the costs do not yet offset the benefits of this approach, as direct costs were significantly higher (robot-assisted surgery cost $25,040.70 vs. $20,476.60 for VATS) (7,8). Single-center reports have described higher incidence rates of laryngeal nerve palsy and chylothorax with robot-assisted VATS than with conventional VATS (9). These reports confirm that all of the approaches mentioned here are non-inferior to the conventional multiport VATS approach, and use of these alternative approaches remains the prerogative of the experienced surgeon.

Download Citation