1.Application of robot-assisted lung basal segmentectomy: A retrospective study
Shaolin TAO ; Fuqiang DAI ; Longyong MEI ; Yonggeng FENG ; Chunshu FANG ; Licheng WU ; Tianyu SUN ; Wei GUO ; Bo DENG ; Qunyou TAN
Chinese Journal of Clinical Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery 2023;30(01):65-70
Objective To summarize the experience of robot-assisted lung basal segmentectomy, and analyze the clinical application value of intersegmental tunneling and pulmonary ligament approach for S9 and/or S10 segmentectomy. Methods The clinical data of 78 patients who underwent robotic lung basal segmentectomy in our hospital between January 2020 to May 2022 were retrospectively reviewed. There were 32 males and 46 females with a median age of 50 (33-72) years. The patients who underwent S9 and/or S10 segmentectomy were divided into a single-direction group (pulmonary ligament approach, n=19) and a bi-direction group (intersegmental tunneling, n=19) according to different approaches, and the perioperative outcomes between the two groups were compared. Results All patients successfully completed the operation, without conversion to thoracotomy and lobectomy, serious complications, or perioperative death. The median operation time was 100 (40-185) min, the blood loss was 50 (10-210) mL, and the median number of dissected lymph nodes was 3 (1-14). There were 4 (5.1%) patients with postoperative air leakage, and 4 (5.1%) patients with hydropneumothorax. No patient showed localized atelectasis or lung congestion at 6 months after the operation. Further analysis showed that there was no significant difference in the operation time, blood loss, thoracic drainage time, complications or postoperative hospital stay between the single-direction and bi-direction groups (P>0.05). However, the number of dissected lymph nodes of the bi-direction group was more than that of the single-direction group [6 (1-13) vs. 5 (1-9), P=0.040]. Conclusion The robotic lung basal segmentectomy for pulmonary nodules is safe and effective. The perioperative results of robotic S9 and/or S10 complex segmentectomy using intersegmental tunneling and pulmonary ligament approach are similar.
2.Perioperative outcomes of robotic-assisted versus video-assisted thoracoscopic atypical segmentectomy for early-stage non-small cell lung cancer: A retrospective cohort study
Fuqiang DAI ; Shaolin TAO ; Xiaoli WU ; Xintian WANG ; Longyong MEI ; Bo DENG ; Qunyou TAN
Chinese Journal of Clinical Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery 2023;30(04):557-563
Objective To compare the perioperative outcomes of atypical segmentectomy between robotic-assisted thoracoscopic surgery (RATS) and conventional video-assisted thoracoscopic surgery (VATS) in early-stage non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC). Methods The data of patients who underwent minimally invasive anatomic atypical segmentectomy in our hospital from October 2016 to December 2021 were collected. These patients were divided into a RATS group and a VATS group according to the operation method. Propensity score (PS) matching was used to select patients with close clinical baseline characteristics, and the perioperative results of the two groups were compared. Results A total of 1 048 patients were enrolled, including 320 males and 728 females, with a mean age of 53.51±11.13 years. There were 277 patients in the RATS group and 771 patients in the VATS group. After 1∶1 PS matching, 277 pairs were selected. Both groups were well balanced for age, sex, smoking history, body mass index, Charlson comorbidity index, pulmonary function, tumor size, tumor location, and histological type. All patients were R0 resection, and there were no deaths within 30 days after surgery. The RATS group had shorter operative time [85 (75, 105) min vs. 115 (95, 140) min, P<0.001] and less blood loss [50 (30, 100) mL vs. 60 (50, 100) mL, P=0.001]. There were no statistical differences between the two groups in lymph node resection, conversion to thoracotomy, thoracic drainage time, total amount of thoracic drainage or postoperative complications (P>0.05). Conclusion Both RATS and VATS atypical segment-ectomies are safe and feasible for early-stage NSCLC. RATS can effectively shorten the operative time, and reduce blood loss.
3.Long-term efficacy and influencing factors of extended thymectomy for myasthenia gravis with thymic atrophy
Taiming ZHANG ; Xiaohe ZHANG ; Cheng SHEN ; Shulin ZHAO ; Xiandong HE ; Shaolin TAO ; Qunyou TAN
Chinese Journal of Clinical Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery 2023;30(06):848-852
Objective To analyze the surgical efficacy and influencing factors of myasthenia gravis (MG) patients with thymic atrophy after thymectomy. Methods The clinical data of MG patients with thymic atrophy undergoing thymectomy between October 2014 and May 2018 in Daping Hospital of Army Medical University and Shijiazhuang People Hospital were retrospectively analyzed. Results A total of 71 patients were collected, including 40 males and 31 females with a mean age of 45.17±12.42 years. All patients received the surgery successfully. After the surgery, 20 (28.17%) patients were stable remission, 12 (16.90%) patients were minimal manifestation status,19 (26.76%) patients were improved, 5 (7.04%) patients showed no change, 3 (4.23%) patients were worsened, 10 (14.08%) patients were exacerbated and 2 (2.82%) patients were dead. Multivariate logistic regression analysis showed that the preoperative illness duration (OR=4.61, 95%CI 1.13-18.85, P=0.03), and postoperative pyridostigmine combined with immunosuppressive (OR=0.12, 95%CI 0.03-0.45, P=0.00) were independent risk factors for long-term efficacy of thymectomy for MG patients with thymic atrophy. Conclusion Early surgery after diagnosis of MG and postoperative pyridostigmine combined with immunosuppressive treatment is beneficial to the prognosis of MG patients with thymic atrophy.
4.Clinical efficacy of thoracoscopy-assisted modified Nuss procedure in children with pectus excavatum: A retrospective analysis in a single center
Shaolin TAO ; Poming KANG ; Yonggeng FENG ; Chunshu FANG ; Licheng WU ; Bo DENG ; Qunyou TAN
Chinese Journal of Clinical Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery 2023;30(06):867-872
Objective To explore the clinical efficacy of thoracoscopy-assisted modified Nuss procedure for pectus excavatum (PE) in children. Methods The clinical data of patients with PE who underwent thoracoscopy-assisted modified Nuss procedure from October 2013 to October 2020 in Daping Hospital were retrospectively analyzed. Results A total of 86 patients were collected, including 79 males and 7 females with a mean age of 14.03±3.36 years. The operations were performed successfully in all patients without intraoperative cardiac vascular injury or perioperative death. The mean operation time was 87.30±33.45 min, bleeding volume was 19.94±14.60 mL, and the postoperative hospitalization stay time was 6.89±2.59 d. Early postoperative complications included 2 patients of pneumothorax, 2 patients of wound fat liquefaction and infection, 2 patients of bar flipping and displacement. One patient had bar displacement 1 year after the surgery. The total complication rate was 8.14%. All patients were followed up for 3-42 months. The bars were taken out about 36 months after the surgery. According to the evaluation criteria of orthopedic effect, 68 (79.07%) patients were excellent, 10 (11.63%) patients were good, 5 (5.81%) patients were moderate and 3 (3.49%) patients were poor. Conclusion Minimally invasive and individualized shaping via the Nuss procedure for PE children is safe and convenient, with satisfied effect. It is worthy of popularization in the clinic.
5.Application of CBL combined with clinical pathway in thoracic surgery practice teaching
Shaolin TAO ; Yonggeng FENG ; Poming KANG ; Cheng SHEN ; Bo DENG ; Ruwen WANG ; Qunyou TAN
Chinese Journal of Medical Education Research 2023;22(2):232-235
Objective:To explore the feasibility and application value of case-based learning (CBL) combined with clinical pathway in thoracic surgery practice teaching.Methods:A total of 30 clinical undergraduate students who practiced from January 2018 to August 2018 were selected and randomly divided into the traditional group and the research group. The traditional group used traditional teaching mode, while the research group adopted the CBL combined with clinical pathway teaching. The scores of theoretical examination and practice skills assessment and the case analysis ability of the two groups were compared at the time of department. In addition, the evaluation of the teaching effect of the two groups of teachers and students was observed through anonymous questionnaires. SPSS 21.0 was used for t-test and Chi-square test. Results:The scores of the students in the research group were better than those in the traditional group, including score of theoretical examination [(88.20±4.02) vs. (80.76±4.62), P<0.001], score of practice skills assessment [(90.80±2.16) vs. (84.80±3.07), P<0.001] and case analysis ability [(89.80±3.34) vs. (81.86±4.31), P<0.001]. The differences were statistically significant. At the same time, the questionnaire showed that the research group was superior to the traditional group in improving students' learning interest, clinical skills, case analysis ability, clinical communication ability, theoretical knowledge understanding and clinical thinking ability, with a statistically significant difference ( P<0.05). While the two groups had no statistically significant difference in students' satisfaction with teachers ( P=0.083). Conclusion:The CBL method combined with clinical pathway teaching method can improve the teaching effect of thoracic surgery practice, which is worth popularizing.
6.Chinese clinical expert consensus on surgical treatment of myasthenia gravis
Qunyou TAN ; Shaolin TAO ; Baodong LIU ; Yangchun LIU
Chinese Journal of Clinical Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery 2022;29(05):529-541
Myasthenia gravis (MG) is an autoimmune disease with indefinite pathogenesis. MG is closely related to thymic diseases, and thymectomy is an important way for MG treatment. However, there are some controversies regarding thymectomy, including indications, operation opportunities, operative procedures, surgical approaches, perioperative managements, and efficacy evaluations, etc. Therefore, based on the literature and the experience of Chinese experts, this consensus has been written after careful discussion and inquiry and 29 recommendations have been made, aiming to guide surgical treatment of MG and improve the clinical outcomes.
7.Clinical analysis of the feasibility and safety of single utility port robot-assisted lung resection
Poming KANG ; Qingyuan LI ; Chunshu FANG ; Shaolin TAO ; Licheng WU ; Bo DENG ; Ruwen WANG ; Qunyou TAN
Chinese Journal of Clinical Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery 2022;29(04):430-435
Objective To investigate the feasibility and safety of single utility port Da Vinci robot-assisted lung resection via anterior approach. Methods The clinical data of 21 patients who underwent single utility port Da Vinci robot-assisted lung resection from February to March 2021 were retrospectively analyzed. There were 10 males and 11 females, with a median age of 50 (34-66) years. The operation time, blood loss, postoperative hospitalization time, postoperative complications and other indicators were analyzed. Results All patients completed the operation successfully with no transition to thoracotomy or perioperative death. Overall surgery time was 103 (70-200) min, Docking time was 5 (3-10) min, operation time was 81 (65-190) min. The blood loss was 45 (20-300) mL. All patients had malignant tumors, the number of dissected lymph node station was 3 (1-6), and the number of lymph nodes was 5 (2-16). The postoperative indwelling time was 3 (2-5) d. The postoperative hospitalization time was 5 (3-7) d. The pain score for the first 3 days after surgery was 3±1 points. Conclusion Single utility port robot-assisted lung resection via anterior approach is safe, less traumatic, more convenient and effective, which can be gradually promoted and applied to clinical trials.
8.The effects of robotic versus thoracoscopic lobectomy on body trauma and lymphocyte subsets in patients with non-small cell lung cancer
Qingyuan LI ; Shaolin TAO ; Poming KANG ; Chunshu FANG ; Dali CHEN ; Licheng WU ; Qunyou TAN
Chinese Journal of Clinical Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery 2021;28(03):299-304
Objective To investigate the effects of robotic versus thoracoscopic lobectomy on body trauma and lymphocyte subsets in patients with non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC). Methods The clinical data of 120 patients with NSCLC who underwent lobectomy in the same operation group at the same period were collected and divided into a robot group (n=60) and a thoracoscope group (n=60) according to different surgical methods. The operation time, intraoperative blood loss, postoperative drainage time, drainage volume, postoperative hospital stay, complication rate, pain visual analogue scale (VAS) and other perioperative indicators were recorded in the two groups. Inflammatory markers: C-reactive protein (CRP), interleukin-6 (IL-6) and lymphocyte subsets (CD3+, CD4+, CD8+, CD4+/CD8+) levels were measured before and 1 d, 3 d after surgery. The effects of the two surgical methods on the body trauma and lymphocyte subsets were compared. Results The operation time, intraoperative blood loss, postoperative drainage time, drainage volume and VAS of the robot group were lower than those of the thoracoscope group, and the differences were statistically significant (P<0.05). On the 1st day after surgery, IL-6 of the thoracoscope group was higher than that of the robot group, while CD3+, CD4+ and CD8+ were lower than those of the robot group, with statistically significant differences (P<0.05). Conclusion Compared with thoracoscopic lobectomy, robotic lobectomy has less trauma, less inflammatory response, faster recovery, less inhibitory effect on lymphocyte subsets, and has clinical advantages.
9.Chinese consensus on surgical treatment of traumatic rib fractures (2021)
Lingwen KONG ; Guangbin HUANG ; Yunfeng YI ; Dingyuan DU ; Baoguo JIANG ; Jinmou GAO ; Lianyang ZHANG ; Jianxin JIANG ; Xiangjun BAI ; Tianbing WANG ; Xingji ZHAO ; Xingbo DANG ; Zhanfei LI ; Feng XU ; Zhongmin LIU ; Ruwen WANG ; Yingbin XIAO ; Qingchen WU ; Chun WU ; Liming CHENG ; Bin YU ; Shusen CUI ; Jinglan WU ; Gongliang DU ; Jin DENG ; Ping HU ; Jun YANG ; Xiaofeng YANG ; Jun ZENG ; Haidong WANG ; Jigang DAI ; Yong FU ; Lijun HOU ; Guiyou LIANG ; Yidan LIN ; Qunyou TAN ; Yan SHEN ; Peiyang HU ; Ning TAO ; Cheng WANG ; Dali WANG ; Xu WU ; Yongfu ZHONG ; Anyong YU ; Dongbo ZHU ; Renju XIAO ; Biao SHAO
Chinese Journal of Trauma 2021;37(10):865-875
Traumatic rib fractures are the most common injury in thoracic trauma. Previously,the patients with traumatic rib fractures were mostly treated non-surgically,of which 50%,especially those combined with flail chest presented chronic pain or chest wall deformities and over 30% had long-term disabilities,being unable to retain a full-time job. In the past two decades,thanks to the development of internal fixation material technology,the surgical treatment of rib fractures has achieved good outcomes. However,there are still some problems in clinical treatment,including inconsistency in surgical treatment and quality control in medical services. The current consensuses on the management of regional traumatic rib fractures published at home and abroad mainly focus on the guidance of the overall treatment decisions and plans,and relevant clinical guidelines abroad lacks progress in surgical treatment of rib fractures in recent years. Therefore,the Chinese Society of Traumatology affiliated to Chinese Medical Association and Chinese College of Trauma Surgeons affiliated to Chinese Medical Doctor Association,in conjunction with national multidisciplinary experts,formulate the Chinese Consensus for Surgical Treatment of Traumatic Rib Fractures(2021)following the principle of evidence-based medicine,scientific nature and practicality. This expert consensus puts forward some clear,applicable,and graded recommendations from aspects of preoperative imaging evaluation,surgical indications,timing of surgery,surgical methods,rib fracture sites for surgical fixation,internal fixation methods and material selections,treatment of combined injuries in rib fractures,in order to provide references for surgical treatment of traumatic rib fractures.
10.Experience of robot-assisted lung segmentectomy through anterior approach
TAO Shaolin ; KANG Poming ; TAN Qunyou ; JIANG Bin ; SHEN Cheng ; FENG Yonggeng ; FANG Chunshu ; WU Licheng ; LI Qingyuan ; DENG Bo ; WANG Ruwen
Chinese Journal of Clinical Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery 2020;27(02):178-182
Objective To evaluate the feasibility and clinical value of robot-assisted lung segmentectomy through anterior approach. Methods We retrospectively analyzed the clinical data of 77 patients who underwent robotic lung segmentectomy through anterior approach in our hospital between June 2018 to October 2019. There were 22 males and 55 females, aged 53 (30-71) years. Patients' symptoms, general conditions, preoperative imaging data, distribution of resected lung segments, operation time, bleeding volume, number of lymph node dissected, postoperative duration of chest tube insertion, drainage volume, postoperative hospital stay, postoperative complications, perioperative death and other indicators were analyzed. Results All operations were successfully completed. There was no conversion to thoracotomy, serious complications or perioperative death. The postoperative pathology revealed early lung cancer in 48 patients, and benign tumors in 29 patients. The mean clinical parameters were following: the robot Docking time 1-30 (M=4) min, the operation time 30-170 (M=76) min, the blood loss 20-400 (M=30) mL, the drainage tube time 2-15 (M=4) days, the drainage fluid volume 200-3 980 (M=780) mL and the postoperative hospital time 3-19 (M=7) days. Conclusion Robotic lung segmentectomy through anterior approach is a safe and convenient operation method for pulmonary nodules.

Result Analysis
Print
Save
E-mail