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Laparoscopic Versus Robotic Lateral Transabdominal Adrenalectomy

Laparoscopic Versus Robotic Lateral Transabdominal Adrenalectomy

Recruiting
18-75 years
All
Phase N/A

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Overview

This study is being done to compare Laparoscopic vs Robotic lateral transabdominal adrenalectomy, these procedures are both standard of care.

The study team would like to compare both patient outcomes and surgeon efficiency and perspectives among both procedures.

The information from this study will help improve patient care, patient outcomes and maximize the appropriate utilization of resources in adrenal surgery.

Description

Adrenalectomy used to be done through big open chevron, subcostal or thoraco-abdominal incisions that led to significant recovery and morbidity. In 1990s, the description of laparoscopic adrenalectomy revolutionized the care of these patients by converting the procedure into a minimally invasive operation with a short hospital stay and recovery. Since then, many centers have reported the safety and efficacy of laparoscopic adrenalectomy. Laparoscopic surgery uses rigid, straight instruments operated by the surgeons under the visual guidance of a two-dimensional video platform.

In the late 2000s, robotic systems have been developed that incorporated articulating wristed instruments used with a three-dimensional computerized video platform. Over the past two decades, robotic systems have penetrated many thoracic, cardiac and abdominal procedures.

A review of the National inpatient database in 2016 showed that 32.7% of the adrenalectomies in the US are being done robotically and 48.5% laparoscopically. Nevertheless, there are scant comparative data and only two randomized studies comparing laparoscopic with robotic adrenalectomy, one of which suffers from a small sample size (10 patients in each group Morino et al Surg Endosci) and the other from exclusion of tumor types (pheochromocytoma only Ma W et al Eur J Surg Oncol). The first study found laparoscopic approach to be superior and the latter study robotic approach to be more advantageous. Both studies highlighted the cost of robotic surgery to be a disadvantage versus laparoscopic approach. Underscoring the lack of data to recommend one technique versus the other, a meta-analysis concluded that robotic adrenalectomy is a safe and feasible procedure with similar clinical outcomes as the laparoscopic approach and recommended high quality randomized clinical trials to determine whether laparoscopic vs robotic approach was superior to perform adrenalectomy.

The study team's clinic has a high-volume minimally invasive adrenalectomy program with a good mixture of laparoscopic and robotic surgical expertise, performing close to 100 surgical cases a year. There are a number of barriers to performing the randomized studies required for adrenalectomy. The first one is the adrenal surgery volume. An average general surgeon does one adrenal surgery a year. A high-volume adrenal surgeon is considered to do > 4-6 adrenalectomies a year. Furthermore, there are only a few centers in the world that possesses a large both laparoscopic and robotic adrenalectomy experience. Being a unique adrenal surgery center, the study team believes that their center is one of the few centers in the world qualified to perform a randomized clinical trial comparing laparoscopic with robotic adrenalectomy. The study team believes that such a study will help understand whether one approach is more advantageous over the other regarding surgical outcomes, especially with the increasing use of robotics in surgical procedures.

Eligibility

Inclusion Criteria:

  1. Men and women between ages 18 and 75
  2. Diagnosis of an adrenal tumor/pathology planned for a minimally invasive adrenalectomy at the department of endocrine surgery at the Cleveland Clinic.

Exclusion Criteria:

  1. Requirement for an open adrenalectomy based on imaging studies suggesting an aggressive cancer.
  2. The presence of extensive surgical history precluding a minimally invasive approach to be undertaken.
  3. Patients planned for a partial, rather than a complete adrenalectomy, as the former is a much easier procedure.
  4. Patients planned for a posterior adrenalectomy (these would be patients with an extensive surgical history with significant intra-abdominal adhesions and those requiring bilateral adrenalectomy).
  5. Mental incapacity or language barrier
  6. Any condition, unwillingness, or inability, not covered by any of the other exclusion criteria, which, in the study clinician's opinion, might jeopardize the subject's safety or compliance with the protocol

Study details
    Adrenalectomy

NCT06407024

The Cleveland Clinic

16 October 2025

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FAQs

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