Establishment of the World's First Telerobotic Remote... : Annals of Surgery (original) (raw)
Original Articles
For Provision of Advanced Laparoscopic Surgery in a Rural Community
Anvari, Mehran MB, BS, PhD*; McKinley, Craig Bsc EE, Msc EE, MD†; Stein, Harvey BSc, MBA‡
From the *Centre for Minimal Access Surgery, St. Joseph's Healthcare, McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada; †North Bay General Hospital, North Bay, Ontario, Canada; and ‡Bell Canada Laboratories, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
Supported by a grant from the Canada Health Infostructure Partnership Program.
Reprints: Dr. M. Anvari, St. Joseph's Healthcare, 50 Charlton Avenue E., Hamilton, Ontario, Canada, L8N 4A6. E-mail: [email protected].
Objective:
To establish a telerobotic surgical service between a teaching hospital and a rural hospital for provision of telerobotic surgery and assistance to aid rural surgeons in providing a variety of advanced laparoscopic surgery to their community patients.
Summary Background Data:
The above service was established between St. Joseph's Hospital in Hamilton and North Bay General Hospital 400 km north of Hamilton on February 28, 2003. The service uses an IP-VPN (15 Mbps of bandwidth) commercially available network to connect the robotic console in Hamilton with 3 arms of the Zeus-TS surgical system in North Bay.
Results:
To date, 21 telerobotic laparoscopic surgeries have taken place between North Bay and Hamilton, including 13 fundoplications, 3 sigmoid resections, 2 right hemicolectomies, 1 anterior resection, and 2 inguinal hernia repairs. The 2 surgeons were able to operate together using the same surgical footprint and interchange roles seamlessly when desired. There have been no serious intraoperative complications and no cases have had to be converted to open surgeries. The mean hospital stays were equivalent to mean laparoscopic LOS in the tertiary institution.
Conclusions:
Telerobotic remote surgery is now in routine use, providing high-quality laparoscopic surgical services to patients in a rural community and providing a superior degree of collaboration between surgeons in teaching hospitals and rural hospitals. Further refinement of the robotic and telecommunication technology should ensure its wider application in the near future.
© 2005 Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, Inc.