Canada’s First Robotic Assisted Totally Intracorporeal Orthotopic Ileal Neobladder

Auteurs-es

  • Richard L. Haddad Fellow in Robotic Uro-Oncology, McGill University Health Centre Division of Urology, Montreal Quebec Canada
  • Patrick Richard Chief Resident in Urology, McGill University Health Centre Division of Urology, Montreal Quebec Canada
  • Franck Bladou Professor, Divisions of Urology and Oncology, McGill University Health Centre and Chief of Urology, Jewish General Hospital of Montreal and Director of Uro-Oncology, Segal Cancer Centre Jewish General Hospital of Montreal

DOI :

https://doi.org/10.5489/cuaj.417

Mots-clés :

robotics, urinary diversion, neobladder, orthotopic bladder substitute, intracorporeal, bladder cancer, laparoscopy

Résumé

Despite robotic-assisted radical cysto-prostatectomy being performed in several centres, the urinary diversion is most often performed extra-corporeal. A robotic intra-corporeal ileal neobladder is technically demanding and long-term functional outcome data is lacking. We performed a robotic intra-corporeal ileal neobladder in a 73-year-old man for muscle invasive non-metastatic bladder cancer. The total operative time was 6 hours 8 minutes. The estimated blood loss was 900 mL. There were no complications and he was discharged on day 12. The principles of open neobladder surgery were maintained, however key modifications were used to reduce technical difficulty and enable timely completion. We found that robotic intracorporeal ileal neobladder can be safely performed with an experienced robotic unit.

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Publié-e

2013-08-19

Comment citer

Haddad, R. L., Richard, P., & Bladou, F. (2013). Canada’s First Robotic Assisted Totally Intracorporeal Orthotopic Ileal Neobladder. Canadian Urological Association Journal, 7(7-8), e537–42. https://doi.org/10.5489/cuaj.417

Numéro

Rubrique

Case Report