Robotic transanal minimally invasive surgery (r-TAMIS): perioperative and short-term outcomes for local excision of rectal cancers.
Guglielmo Niccolò PiozziAnia PrzedlackaRauand DuhokyOroog AliYasser GhanemRichard BeableAntony HigginsonJim S KhanPublished in: Surgical endoscopy (2024)
r-TAMIS, with strict postoperative surveillance, is a safe and feasible approach for local excision of early rectal cancer and may have a role in surgically unfit and elderly patients who refuse or cannot undergo TME surgery. Future prospective multicentre large-scale studies are needed to report the long-term oncological outcomes.
Keyphrases
- rectal cancer
- minimally invasive
- locally advanced
- patients undergoing
- coronary artery bypass
- public health
- cardiac surgery
- robot assisted
- clinical trial
- middle aged
- current status
- study protocol
- community dwelling
- cross sectional
- randomized controlled trial
- radiation therapy
- surgical site infection
- type diabetes
- acute kidney injury
- acute coronary syndrome
- adipose tissue
- skeletal muscle
- percutaneous coronary intervention
- weight loss
- radical prostatectomy