Adverse Events in Robotic Surgery: A Retrospective Study of 14 Years of FDA Data
Homa Alemzadeh, Ravishankar K. Iyer, Zbigniew Kalbarczyk, Nancy, Leveson, Jaishankar Raman

TL;DR
This study analyzes 14 years of FDA data on robotic surgery adverse events, revealing device malfunctions, patient injuries, and deaths, with insights into causes and differences across surgical specialties to inform safer practices.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive retrospective analysis of FDA adverse event reports for robotic surgery, highlighting common malfunctions and their impacts to improve safety and design.
Findings
75.9% device malfunctions reported
Lower injury rates in gynecology and urology
Device malfunctions often caused procedure interruptions
Abstract
Understanding the causes and patient impacts of surgical adverse events will help improve systems and operational practices to avoid incidents in the future. We analyzed the adverse events data related to robotic systems and instruments used in minimally invasive surgery, reported to the U.S. FDA MAUDE database from January 2000 to December 2013. We determined the number of events reported per procedure and per surgical specialty, the most common types of device malfunctions and their impact on patients, and the causes for catastrophic events such as major complications, patient injuries, and deaths. During the study period, 144 deaths (1.4% of the 10,624 reports), 1,391 patient injuries (13.1%), and 8,061 device malfunctions (75.9%) were reported. The numbers of injury and death events per procedure have stayed relatively constant since 2007 (mean = 83.4, 95% CI, 74.2-92.7). Surgical…
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