Advancing minimally invasive hepato-pancreato-biliary surgery: Barriers to adoption and equitable access Journal Article


Authors: Armstrong, M.; Lu, P.; Wang, J.; El-Hayek, K.; Cleary, S.; Asbun, H.; Alseidi, A.; Tran Cao, H. S.; Wei, A. C.; on behalf of SAGES HPB Committee
Article Title: Advancing minimally invasive hepato-pancreato-biliary surgery: Barriers to adoption and equitable access
Abstract: Background: Despite a growing body of literature supporting the safety of robotic hepatopancreatobiliary (HPB) procedures, the adoption of minimally invasive techniques in HPB surgery has been slow compared to other specialties. We aimed to identify barriers to implementing robotic assisted surgery (RAS) in HPB and present a framework that highlights opportunities to improve adoption. Methods: A modified nominal group technique guided by a 13-question framework was utilized. The meeting session was guided by senior authors, and field notes were also collected. Results were reviewed and free text responses were analyzed for major themes. A follow-up priority setting survey was distributed to all participants based on meeting results. Results: Twenty three surgeons with varying robotic HPB experience from different practice settings participated in the discussion. The majority of surgeons identified operating room efficiency, having a dedicated operating room team, and the overall hospital culture and openness to innovation as important facilitators of implementing a RAS program. In contrast, cost, capacity building, disparities/risk of regionalization, lack of evidence, and time/effort were identified as the most significant barriers. When asked to prioritize the most important issues to be addressed, participants noted access and availability of the robot as the most important issue, followed by institutional support, cost, quality of supporting evidence, and need for robotic training. Conclusions: This study reports surgeons’ perceptions of major barriers to equitable access and increased implementation of robotic HPB surgery. To overcome such barriers, defining key resources, adopting innovative solutions, and developing better methods of collecting long term data should be the top priorities. Graphical abstract: (Figure presented.) © The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature 2024.
Keywords: follow up; quality control; quality of life; cohort analysis; evidence based practice; health survey; risk; hospital care; health care cost; total quality management; surgeon; surgical training; surgery; liver surgery; minimally invasive surgery; biliary tract surgery; robotics; abdominal surgery; biliary tract surgical procedures; qualitative research; regionalization; health care access; digestive system surgical procedures; perception; health care disparity; thematic analysis; health services accessibility; access; author; cultural anthropology; pancreas surgery; procedures; adoption; capacity building; equity; minimally invasive surgical procedures; humans; human; article; robotic surgical procedures; robot assisted surgery; research priority; implementation science; health equity; performance indicator; hepatopancreatobiliary; time pressure
Journal Title: Surgical Endoscopy
Volume: 38
Issue: 10
ISSN: 0930-2794
Publisher: Springer  
Date Published: 2024-10-01
Start Page: 5643
End Page: 5650
Language: English
DOI: 10.1007/s00464-024-11078-1
PUBMED: 39117957
PROVIDER: scopus
PMCID: PMC11980437
DOI/URL:
Notes: Article -- MSK corresponding author is Alice Wei -- Source: Scopus
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  1. Alice Chia-Chi Wei
    197 Wei