ORIGINAL ARTICLE
Is robotic hepatectomy cost-effective? In view of patient-reported outcomes

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.asjsur.2018.12.010Get rights and content
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Summary

Background

Robotic hepatectomy has been accepted as an alternative for patients needing surgery. However, few reports addressed the patient-reported outcomes and long-term quality of life (QoL) of patients having undergone robotic liver surgery.

Methods

This study presented the QoL and cost-effectiveness associated with robotic and open hepatectomy by performing a comparative survey using two standardized questionnaires (Short Form-36 and Gastrointestinal Quality of Life Index).

Results

One hundred patients completed the study. The robotic group tended to experienced longer operation time but shorter length of hospital stay compared to open group. Moreover, the robotic group had faster return to daily activities, less need of patient-controlled anesthesia, and less wound-related complaints in long-term follow-up. The robotic group incurred higher peri-operative expenses; however, the cost of inpatient care was lower.

Conclusions

Our study suggested that robotic hepatectomy provided good post-operative QoL and recovery of daily activity. However, efforts for lowering the financial burden of medical care by reducing the cost of robotic surgery is necessary for further application.

Keywords

Robotic hepatectomy
Patient-reported outcome
Quality of life
Cost-effectiveness

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1

The first two authors contributed equally to this study.