A new editorial published in The BMJ reviewed the implications of the recent PORTAL randomized trial and urged caution regarding the widespread adoption of robotic pancreatoduodenectomy (RPD). While acknowledging the growing technical feasibility of robotic pancreatic surgery, the authors emphasize that current evidence remains insufficient to justify broad implementation outside experienced centers.
The editorial identifies several unresolved issues:
The authors argue that enthusiasm for new technology should not outpace high-quality clinical evidence.
For hepatopancreatobiliary (HPB) surgeons, robotic pancreatoduodenectomy should continue to be introduced through structured training programs, prospective audits, and high-volume centers with multidisciplinary expertise. Careful patient counseling and ongoing outcome evaluation remain essential before routine adoption.
Source: BMJ Editorial
A prospective study published in Updates in Surgery evaluated Bladder Peritoneum Flap Reconstruction (BLAPER) following laparoscopic extralevator abdominoperineal excision (ELAPE) for low rectal cancer.
Twenty-six patients underwent successful pelvic reconstruction using the bladder peritoneum flap and were followed for a median of 47 months.
For colorectal surgeons performing ELAPE, BLAPER offers a practical reconstructive option that may reduce empty pelvis syndrome, bowel descent, and perineal hernia formation. Although encouraging, larger comparative studies are required before widespread adoption.
Source: PubMed Study
A prospective comparative study involving 100 women undergoing uterus-preserving surgery for apical pelvic organ prolapse compared laparoscopic sacrohysteropexy with vNOTES lateral suspension.
Both procedures achieved excellent early anatomical outcomes:
Compared with laparoscopy, the vNOTES approach demonstrated:
For gynecologic minimally invasive surgeons, vNOTES lateral suspension appears to offer meaningful short-term recovery advantages while maintaining comparable anatomical success. Long-term recurrence data remain necessary before determining the optimal surgical approach.
Source: PubMed Study
A systematic review and meta-analysis published in Hernia evaluated occult contralateral inguinal hernias identified during unilateral laparoscopic transabdominal preperitoneal (TAPP) repair.
Across 4,485 patients, surgeons identified occult contralateral defects in 873 patients (19.5%).
Repair of these asymptomatic defects demonstrated:
However, the available evidence remains predominantly retrospective.
This review supports individualized intraoperative decision-making rather than routine bilateral repair. Careful patient counseling, informed consent, and documentation remain essential when occult contralateral defects are encountered during TAPP surgery.
Source: PubMed Study
A multicenter Japanese propensity score-matched study compared Endoscopic Full-Thickness Resection (EFTR) with Laparoscopic and Endoscopic Cooperative Surgery (LECS) for gastric submucosal tumors measuring 3 cm or less.
Compared with LECS, EFTR achieved:
For upper gastrointestinal surgeons and advanced endoscopists, EFTR represents an attractive minimally invasive option for carefully selected small intraluminal gastric tumors, potentially improving efficiency while preserving oncologic outcomes.
Source: PubMed Study
A technical report published in Esophagus described a novel single-port robotic non-transthoracic esophagectomy performed using the da Vinci SP platform.
The procedure utilized:
All three phases were completed through the same robotic single-port platform.
The authors highlighted:
Although limited to a technical description, this approach represents an important evolution in minimally invasive esophageal surgery and may become particularly valuable for patients with limited pulmonary reserve where thoracotomy or thoracoscopy is undesirable. Future comparative outcome studies will determine its clinical role.
Source: PubMed Study
Today's evidence emphasizes that innovation in minimally invasive surgery must be guided by high-quality evidence rather than technology alone. Whether evaluating robotic pancreatoduodenectomy, novel pelvic reconstruction techniques, vNOTES prolapse repair, selective contralateral hernia repair, advanced endoscopic tumor resection, or next-generation single-port robotic esophagectomy, the common theme remains careful patient selection, structured surgical training, and rigorous outcome assessment before widespread clinical adoption.