# Voluminous hiatal hernias – the role of robotic surgery

**Authors:** Michel Dosch, Mickael Chevallay, Minoa K. Jung, Stefan Mönig

PMC · DOI: 10.1515/iss-2023-0033 · 2024-07-26

## TL;DR

Robotic surgery is a promising option for treating large hiatal hernias, with outcomes similar to traditional laparoscopic methods.

## Contribution

The paper reviews robotic surgical techniques and evidence for their use in voluminous hiatal hernia repair.

## Key findings

- Robotic surgery offers comparable complication rates and hospital stays to laparoscopic surgery for hiatal hernias.
- Operative times for robotic surgery decrease with surgeon experience.
- Most studies on robotic hiatal hernia repair are observational and single-center.

## Abstract

Robotic surgery has become increasingly prevalent in UGI surgery over the last decade, particularly for treating hiatal hernias. Voluminous hiatal hernias, defined as the herniation of 30–50 % of the stomach into the thorax, often require surgical intervention due to associated dysphagia and potential severe complications. Given the challenges of repairing voluminous hiatal hernias, especially in elderly and fragile patients, the surgical technique should be optimal. Robotic surgery affords excellent visualization, allowing high mediastinal dissection and precise hiatus reconstruction. Despite the clear technical advantages, it remains to be demonstrated if the robotic approach matches the outcomes of conventional laparoscopic techniques. We review here the fundamentals of hiatal hernia surgery and describe our surgical technique using the da Vinci Xi robot to operate voluminous hiatal hernias. Additionally, we performed a systematic research analysis and selected recent publications focusing on robotic surgery for voluminous hiatal hernias. Recent studies report comparable complication rates, recurrence, and hospital stay lengths between robotic and laparoscopy surgery. Initial robotic procedures had longer operative times, which decreased with surgeon experience. Most of the studies were observational and retrospective, reporting the experience of a single center. Robotic surgery appears to be a viable option with similar complications rates to laparoscopic surgery under optimized conditions. Current literature supports the broader adoption of robotic surgery for voluminous hiatal hernias. However, prospective randomized studies are needed to further validate its use.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** hiatal hernia (MESH:D006551), dysphagia (MESH:D003680)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

5 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11934938/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11934938