Robotic Surgery at UNMC

UNMC/NHS Receives Approval to Begin Performing Computer-Assisted

Chest Surgery Using da Vinci Surgical System

The University of Nebraska Medical Center and Nebraska Health System

will begin performing some chest surgeries using its computerized da Vinci

Surgical System. Earlier this month, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration

(FDA) approved the use of Intuitive Surgical, Inc.s da Vinci Surgical

System for surgical procedures performed in the chest.

Some of the chest surgeries UNMC and NHS will perform with the da Vinci

system include: mobilization of the internal mammary artery as part of

a coronary artery bypass, lung resections, tumor biopsies, and esophagus

surgery.

The clearance broadens potential surgical use of the system, providing

an advantage for patients and physicians, said Timothy Galbraith, M.D.,

UNMC/Nebraska Health System surgeon and chief of cardiothoracic surgery

and vice chairman of surgery. This FDA clearance made the system commercially

available for thoracoscopic procedures. The first clearance came last year

for laparoscopic procedures.

The da Vinci System currently is the only surgical robotic system that

has received FDA clearance for performing surgery in the United States.

UNMC/NHS surgeons performed their first robotic procedure using the

system last August on a patient who needed bowel resection surgery at NHS

University Hospital. To date, 12 clinical procedures have been performed

for various conditions.

Dr. Galbraith said compared to traditional surgery, robotic or computer-assisted

surgery, reduces patient pain, recovery and rehabilitation time. Using

the system will allow surgery with the chest closed — eliminating the

need to open or crack the breastbone or sternum.

Incisions made in between the ribs with the da Vinci system are less

than one inch compared to traditional surgery in which 10- to 12-inch incisions

are made through the breastbone.

With the da Vinci, patients potentially could be out of the hospital

in two days and back to work in one week, compared to traditional surgery

that may require four to seven days in the hospital and a six-week recovery

period, Dr. Galbraith said.

Safety and effectiveness of the da Vinci Surgical System was demonstrated

during a national, rigorously controlled clinical trial of 60 patients

in which its use was compared to conventional thoracoscopic techniques

for mobilization of the internal mammary artery as part of a coronary artery

bypass graft procedure.

The da Vinci Surgical System consists of a surgeons viewing and control

console having an integrated, high-performance 3-D vision system, a patient-side

cart consisting of three robotic arms that position and precisely maneuver

endoscopic instruments and an endoscope, and a variety of articulating

instruments.

By integrating computer-enhanced technology with surgeons technical

skills, Intuitive believes that its system enables surgeons to perform

better surgery in a manner never before experienced. The system translates

a surgeons natural hand, wrist and finger movements on instrument controls

at the surgeons console outside the patients body into corresponding

micro-movements of the instrument tips positioned inside the patient through

small puncture incisions, or ports.

Twelve UNMC surgeons to date have been trained on the equipment including

general, transplantation, gynecologic, urologic, and cardiac surgeons.

Procedures performed to date include: bowel resection; hernia repair; ovarian

transposition; pelvic lymph node dissection; morbid obesity surgery; colon

resection; and bile duct exploration.

Last year, UNMC became the eighth U.S. medical center to obtain the

da Vinci Surgical System equipment. UNMC physicians affectionately named

the equipment “Chuck,” in honor of Charles Durham and his late wife, Margre,

who gave a major donation a few years ago to benefit three areas: arthritis,

prostate cancer and minimally invasive surgery.