Abstract
A best evidence topic was written according to a structured protocol. The question addressed was whether totally endoscopic coronary artery bypass (TECAB) is safe, effective and feasible. A total of 171 papers were found, of which eight represented the best evidence. The authors, date, journal, study type, population, main outcome measures and results are tabulated. The da Vinci robotic system was utilized in seven retrospective studies and one multicentre prospective trial, comprising 724 patients undergoing TECAB. Patient-related outcomes, including the incidence of major adverse cardiac events, graft patency and survival, were investigated. From the studies evaluated, TECAB appears to be safe operation with low complication rates and excellent early- and mid-term graft patencies. The incidence of internal thoracic artery injury was documented in four studies and ranged from 0 to10%. Re-exploration for bleeding was necessary in 1–15% of patients. Conversion to open techniques was performed in 0–24% of cases. There was no in-hospital mortality in the majority of studies, but this reached 2.1% in a large series of 228 patients. Target-vessel reintervention rates varied between 0 and 12.1% according to the institutional experience. Pre- and post-discharge graft patencies were excellent at 93–100 and 92–100%, respectively. Intraoperative variables, such as time taken for internal thoracic artery harvest, anastomosis, cross-clamp, cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) and the overall operation were as follows: internal thoracic artery harvest time (range 5–187 min), anastomosis time (range 6–82 min), cross-clamp time (range 30–223 min), CPB time (range 41–268 min) and operative time (range 84–600 min). TECAB is a technically demanding and time-consuming procedure associated with a significant learning curve. Proctoring and structured training programmes are currently supported by European and international societies to encourage wider uptake of the procedure. In conclusion, TECAB represents a feasible alternative to conventional coronary artery bypass in selected patients. It is associated with low morbidity and excellent mid-term graft patency. Larger, prospective and multicentre trials are required to assess the long-term and patient-reported outcomes of TECAB.
Keywords: TECAB, CABG, Robotic, Endoscopic, Coronary artery, Cardiac
INTRODUCTION
A best evidence topic was constructed according to a structured protocol. This is fully described in the ICVTS [1].
THREE-PART QUESTION
In [patients undergoing totally endoscopic coronary artery bypass surgery], is [robotic assistance] associated with a high rate of [postoperative complications]?
CLINICAL SCENARIO
You attend a multidisciplinary meeting to discuss the surgical management of a 67-year old male with single-vessel disease of the left anterior descending (LAD) artery. Minimally invasive direct coronary artery bypass (MIDCAB) is suggested as the operation of choice, owing to excellent graft patency and survival outcomes. Totally endoscopic coronary artery bypass (TECAB) is mentioned as another suitable technique, but there are concerns regarding the long-term results of this procedure. You perform a literature search to investigate the safety, feasibility and efficacy of TECAB.
SEARCH STRATEGY
Medline 1948 to March 2011 using the Ovid interface. [robotic cardiac surgery.mp OR robotic coronary artery bypass.mp OR robotic CABG.mp OR endoscopic cardiac surgery.mp OR endoscopic coronary artery bypass.mp OR endoscopic CABG.mp].
SEARCH OUTCOME
The search strategy identified 187 papers, of which eight provided the best evidence to answer the clinical question. Only TECAB papers published within the last 10 years were selected (Table 1).
Table 1:
Author, date and country Study type (level of evidence) |
Patient group | Outcomes | Key results | Comments |
---|---|---|---|---|
Gao et al. (2011), J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg, China [2] Single-centre, retrospective study (level 2b) |
58 patients (mean age 56.97 ± 9.7 years) da Vinci surgical system utilized 16 patients underwent a hybrid procedure Follow-up by computed tomography angiography at 3, 6 and 12 months |
Incidence of ITA injury Re-exploration for bleeding Conversions In-hospital mortality Target-vessel reintervention Mean ITA harvest time Mean anastomosis time Mean operation time Predischarge graft patency Post-discharge graft patency |
0/58 (0%) 1/58 (1.7%) 2/58 (3%) 0/58 (0%) 0/58 (0%) 31.3 ± 10.5 min (18–55) 11.3 ± 4.7 min (5–21) 264.8 ± 65.6 min (150–420) 100% 100% |
TECAB is a safe procedure in selected patients, producing excellent short- and mid-term graft patency results There is a substantial learning curve Careful consideration of patient comorbidities and the location, course and quality of the target vessel are needed |
Argenziano et al. (2006), Ann Thorac Surg, USA [3] Multicentre, prospective trial (level 1b) |
85 patients (mean age 58.4 years) da Vinci surgical system utilized Follow-up with coronary angiography at 3 months |
Incidence of MACE All-cause mortality Perioperative myocardial infarction Target-vessel reintervention Incidence of other adverse events Conversions Reoperation for bleeding Mean ITA harvest time Mean anastomosis time Mean cross-clamp time Mean CPB time Mean operation time 3-month graft patency Overall freedom from reintervention or graft failure |
5.9% overall 0/85 (0.0%) 1/85 (1.1%) 4/85 (4.7%) 3/85 (3.5%) 5/85 (6%) 3/85 (3.5%) 60 ± 24 min (26–187) 28 ± 11 min (14–82) 71 ± 26 min (30–140) 117 ± 44 min (41–254) 353 ± 89 min (200–600) Anastomotic occlusion in two cases; ≥50% stenosis in four cases 91% |
TECAB can be performed with acceptable safety and efficacy but requires participation in a structured training programme |
de Cannière et al. (2007), J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg, Belgium [4] Multicentre, retrospective study (level 2b) |
228 patients (mean age 59.2 ± 10.1 years) da Vinci surgical system utilized Patients were categorized to groups: A (on-pump, 90 patients), B (off-pump, 74 patients), or C (conversions, 64 patients) 216 patients were followed up at 6 months |
6-month freedom from MACE All-cause mortality Perioperative myocardial infarction (<7 days) Target-vessel reintervention Number of grafts with <50% stenosis in distal anastomosis Negative stress test Combined procedural efficacy |
No significant difference between groups Overall: 5/228 (2.1%) A: 1/90 (1.1%) B: 2/74 (2.2%) C: 2/64 (2.31%) Overall: 2/228 (0.9%) A: 1/90 (1.1%) B: 1/74 (1.2%) C: 0/74 (0.0%) Overall: 6/228 (2.6%) A: 2/90 (2.2%) B: 3/74 (4.1%) C: 0/74 (0.0%) A: 61/62 (98.4%) B: 35/38 (92.1%) C: 15/17 (88.2%) A: 23/23 (100%) B: 24/25 (96%) C: 28/28 (100%) A: 97% B: 97% C: 97.7% |
Patency rates and 6-month freedom from MACEs were acceptable Both on- and off-pump TECAB are feasible, safe and effective procedures Conversion decreases with time, and does not adversely affect the outcome |
Dogan et al. (2002), J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg, Germany [5] Single-centre, retrospective study (level 2b) |
45 patients (mean age 63 ± 6 years) da Vinci surgical system utilized 37 patients underwent single-vessel (SV) TECAB; 8 patients underwent double-vessel (DV) TECAB |
Operative mortality Bleeding from anastomosis Prolonged cross-clamp time Port-access failure ITA injury Hypovolaemic shock Myocardial infarction Hypoxic brain damage Moderate reperfusion injury Retrograde aortic dissection Conversions Target-vessel reintervention Predischarge graft patency Mean ITA harvest time Mean anastomosis time Mean cross-clamp time Mean CPB time Mean operation time |
0/45 (0.0%) 2/45 (4.4%) 4/45 (8.9%) 3/45 (6.7%) 1/45 (2.2%) 1/45 (2.2%) 1/45 (2.2%) 1/45 (2.2%) 1/45 (2.2%) 1/45 (2.2%) 10 of the first 22 patients; 1 in the last 20 patients 0/45 (0%) 100% in the first 22 patients SV: 65 ± 21 min DV: 118 ± 12.3 min SV: 18.4 ± 3.8 min DV: 21.2 ± 6.3 min SV: 61 ± 16 min DV: 99 ± 55 min SV: 136 ± 32 min DV: 197 ± 63 min SV: 4.2 ± 0.9 h DV: 6.3 ± 1.0 h |
Majority of complications occurred in the first 20 patients, and are associated with the learning curve Bilateral ITA grafting is possible, but is technically challenging and very time-consuming After learning curve, single-vessel TECAB is a straightforward procedure |
Kappert et al. (2008), J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg, Germany [6] Single-centre, retrospective study (level 2b) |
41 patients (mean age 60.6 ± 8.9 years) da Vinci surgical system utilized First eight procedures performed on arrested hearts; subsequent procedures were off-pump Mean follow-up period 69 ± 7.4 months |
In-hospital survival Conversions Overall survival after 5 years Myocardial infarction Myocardial infarction and cardiac death Repeated revascularization of target vessel Freedom from any major adverse event Freedom from MACE Freedom from LAD intervention |
41/41 (100%) 0/41 (0%) 38/41 (92.7%) <6 months: 1/41 (2.4%) >6 months: 1/41 (2.4%) 2/41 (4.8%) <6 months: 3/41 (7.3%) >6 months: 2/41 (4.8%) 75.6% 82.9% 82.7% |
Relatively high incidence of target-vessel reintervention following TECAB leaves significant room for improvement Advances in instrumentation and anastomotic technology will produce increasingly reproducible results |
Mishra et al. (2008), Asian Cardiovasc Thorac Ann, India [7] Single-centre, retrospective study (level 2b) |
13 patients (mean age 56.3 ± 7.2 years) da Vinci surgical system utilized 11 procedures were off-pump; 2 were performed on an arrested heart Follow-up with coronary angiography at 3 months |
Perioperative myocardial infarction Reoperation for bleeding New-onset atrial fibrillation Wound infection Postoperative mortality Late mortality Conversions Recurrence of angina Target-vessel reintervention Graft patency at 3 months Mean ITA harvest time Mean anastomosis time Cross-clamp time CPB time Mean operation time |
0/13 (0.0%) 1/13 (7.7%) 0/13 (0.0%) 0/13 (0.0%) 0/13 (0.0%) 0/13 (0.0%) 0/13 (0.0%) 0/13 (0.0%) 0/13 (0.0%) 12/13 (92%) 42 min (35–74) 20–36 min 44 min 64 min 236 ± 45 min (196–296) |
Authors advocate early conversion to an open procedure where necessary Authors conclude that beating-heart TECAB is a safe procedure that avoids the harmful effects of CPB |
Srivastava et al. (2010), Ann Thorac Surg, USA [8] Single-centre, retrospective study (level 2b) |
214 patients (mean age 67.9 ± 11.8 years) da Vinci surgical system utilized All procedures performed on a beating heart Single-vessel (SV) TECAB in 139 patients (65%) Double-vessel (DV) TECAB in 68 patients (32%) Triple-vessel (TV) TECAB in 7 patients (3%) 50 patients underwent hybrid procedures Patients followed up for 528 ± 697 days |
Mortality ITA injury Reoperation for bleeding Ventilatory support >48 h New-onset atrial fibrillation Conversions Postoperative recurrence of angina Graft patency Overall clinical freedom from graft failure and reintervention Mean single ITA harvest time Mean bilateral ITA harvest time Mean anastomosis time Mean operation time |
SV: 0/139 (0%) DV:0/68 (0%) TV: 0/7 (0%) 0/214 (0%) 2/214 (1%) 8/214 (4%) 22/214 (10%) SV: 5/214 (2.1%) DV: 12/214 (5%) TV: 0/214 (0%) 3/214 (1%) 182/182 (100%) 98.6% SV: 34.5 ± 13.2 min (16–110) DV: 33.2 ± 8.5 min (23–51) DV: 63.7 ± 14.5 min (40–110) TV: 65.9 ± 13.1 min (44–82) SV: 12.5 ± 5.5 min (6–38) DV: 13 ± 4.4 min (7–27) TV: 13.1 ± 3.9 min (8–27) SV: 177.3 ± 52.5 min (84–466) DV: 318.5 ± 97 min (161–616) TV: 523.6 ± 112.3 min (337–682) |
Beating-heart TECAB is a safe and efficacious procedure for selected patients with single- and multivessel coronary disease and offers excellent early clinical and graft patency results |
Bonatti et al. (2006), J Cardiovasc Thorac Surg, Austria [9] Single-centre, retrospective study (level 2b) |
40 patients postoperatively categorized to those without (group 1, mean age 59 years) and with (group 2, mean age 59 years) technical difficulties during TECAB da Vinci surgical system and remote access perfusion CPB utilized All procedures carried out on an arrested heart Follow-up coronary angiography at 3 months in 13 patients from group 1, and 11 patients from group 2 |
Mortality Patients with technical difficulty Conversions On-table revision Postoperative revision procedure Additional sternotomy Additional mini-thoracotomy ITA injury Epicardial lesion Anastomotic problem Remote access perfusion problem Port bleeding Revision for bleeding Atrial fibrillation Target-vessel reintervention Cumulative survival Cumulative 3-year freedom from angina Anastomotic patency at 3 months Distal target-vessel patency at 3 months Proximal target-vessel patency at 3 months ITA harvest time Anastomosis time Cross-clamp time CPB time |
Group 1: 0/20 (0%) Group 2: 0/20 (0%) 20/40 (50%) 6/40 (15%) 3/40 (8%) 4/40 (10%) 11/40 (28%) 2/40 (5%) 4/40 (10%) 3/40 (8%) 7/40 (18%) 9/40 (23%) 3/40 (8%) Group 1: 1/20 (5%) Group 2: 6/20 (30%) Group 1: 2/20 (10%) Group 2: 3/20 (15%) 0% in both groups Group 1: 100% Group 2: 100% Group 1: 93% Group 2: 100% Group 1: 13/13 (100%) Group 2: 11/11 (100%) Group 1: 13/13 (100%) Group 2: 11/11 (100%) Group 1: 13/13 (100%) Group 2: 10/11 (91%) Group 1: 48 min (35–85) Group 2: 55 min (37–70) Group 1: 35 min (26–66) Group 2: 35 min (23–60) Group 1: 80 min (44–132) Group 2: 71 min (37–223) Group 1: 113 min (72–230) Group 2: 134 min (79–368) |
Overall problem severity level was low and improved with increasing experience Surgical technical challenges translated into significantly increased operative times Technical difficulties may be frequently encountered during TECAB, but patient-related consequences can be minimized with careful observation and intraoperative quality control Freedom from angina and graft patency are not compromised by technical challenges during TECAB |
CPB: cardiopulmonary bypass; ITA: internal thoracic artery; LAD: left anterior descending (artery); MACE: major adverse cardiac event; TECAB: totally endoscopic coronary artery bypass.
RESULTS
In most studies evaluated, patients referred to first-time single-vessel coronary artery bypass graft (CABG) were eligible for TECAB. Exclusion criteria included previous thoracic surgery, morbid obesity, haemodynamic instability, acute myocardial infarction or stroke, renal failure, severe respiratory compromise and peripheral vascular disease, precluding single-lung ventilation and femoral cannulation, respectively.
In the Gao et al.' [2] retrospective study of 58 single-vessel TECAB patients, there was no ITA injury. Two cases were converted to MIDCAB (3%), with one re-exploration (1.7%) for bleeding. Graft patency predischarge and at 3, 6 and 12 months was 100%.
Argenziano et al. [3] reported a 5.9% incidence of major adverse cardiac events (MACEs) in their multicentre prospective trial of 85 single-vessel TECAB patients. Five patients (6%) required conversion to sternotomy following internal thoracic artery (ITA) injury, anastomotic bleeding or poor intraoperative graft flow. Target-vessel reintervention was necessary in four patients (4.7%). Three-month angiography demonstrated anastomotic occlusion in two cases and >50% stenosis in four cases. Nevertheless, overall freedom from reintervention or graft failure was 91%.
de Cannière et al. [4] investigated 228 patients, 90% with single-vessel disease, undergoing on- or off-pump TECAB in a multicentre retrospective study. Twenty-seven were converted to non-robotic techniques in the on-pump group, due to cannulation issues in 55%. The majority of 37 off-pump conversions were attributed to patient-related factors and anastomotic bleeding. All-cause mortality was lowest with on-pump at 2.1%. Six patients (2.6%) required target-vessel reintervention. Overall efficacy, as defined by angiographic patency and stress echocardiography, was 97%.
In their retrospective study, Dogan et al. [5] demonstrated 100% predischarge graft patency among the first 22 (of 45) patients undergoing single- or double-vessel TECAB. Ten required conversion to left mini-thoracotomy or sternotomy. Other complications included anastomotic bleeding (4.4%), ITA injury (2.2%), myocardial infarction (2.2%) and retrograde aortic dissection (2.2%).
Kappert et al. [6] retrospectively analysed 41 patients with high-grade LAD lesions; the first eight underwent arrested-heart TECAB, whereas the remainder had beating-heart procedures. Fourteen patients underwent postoperative angiography and 5 (12.2%) required LAD reintervention. Two suffered myocardial infarction within the follow-up period, but neither was attributed to the bypassed target vessels. There was no in-hospital mortality, and overall survival was 92.7%, with 82.9% freedom from MACCE.
Three-month graft patency was 92% among 13 single-vessel TECAB patients (11 off-pump) in the retrospective study by Mishra et al. [7]. There was one reoperation for bleeding; no other complications or mortality were reported.
Srivastava et al. [8] retrospectively analysed 214 patients undergoing single-vessel, double-vessel or triple-vessel beating-heart TECAB. There were no reported ITA injuries. Five patients (2.1%) in the single-vessel and 12 (5%) in the double-vessel group required conversion to mini-thoracotomy; two (1%) required re-exploration for bleeding. Complications included new-onset atrial fibrillation in 10% and postoperative angina in 1%. In 182 of a total of 239 grafts (82%) evaluated, 100% were patent. Overall clinical freedom from graft failure and reintervention was 98.6%.
Bonatti et al. [9] retrospectively investigated 40 patients undergoing arrested-heart TECAB for single-vessel disease using remote-access perfusion CPB. Undesirable technical issues arose in 20 cases (50%), including remote-access perfusion problems (23%), anastomotic bleeding (18%), ITA injury (10%) and port bleeding (8%). Revision was necessary in 30% (6 of 20) in which technical challenges arose. Nevertheless, there was no operative mortality or target-vessel reintervention, and cumulative survival was 100%.
Many studies describe a significant TECAB ‘learning curve’, reflected by extended operating times (3–5 h) for single-vessel bypass, but exceeding 8 h for triple-vessel procedures. However, with increasing surgical experience, there is a general trend towards shorter ITA harvest, anastomosis, cross-clamp and cardiopulmonary bypass times.
CLINICAL BOTTOM LINE
The studies examined are generally of low evidence level and limited by small patient populations, short durations of follow-up and lack of comparison against alternatives such as MIDCAB. In their 2005 guidance, the National Institute for Clinical Excellence (NICE) highlighted the inadequate safety and efficacy data regarding TECAB (http://publications.nice.org.uk/totally-endoscopic-robotically-assisted-coronary-artery-bypass-grafting-ipg128). However, both on- and off-pump TECAB demonstrate promising safety outcomes, with a low incidence of MACE. TECAB represents a major paradigm change, demanding a different, complex skill set from open cardiac surgery. The complications observed here may reflect early experience, associated with a substantial learning curve. Indeed, intraoperative conversion rates may decline with increasing experience. Furthermore, conversion does not compromise graft patency, which remains excellent in the short- and mid-terms. Careful patient selection, target-vessel assessment and team-training are mandatory. Although TECAB is time-consuming and technically demanding, it is feasible. Technological developments, e.g. in anastomotic devices and endoscopic stabilizers, will further enhance this procedure. Proctoring and the provision of structured educational programmes will facilitate the wider adoption of TECAB within the cardiac surgical community. In conclusion, TECAB is a safe alternative to conventional CABG, offering excellent graft patency in highly selected patient groups. Larger, prospective and multicentre trials are required to confirm the encouraging results of TECAB and report on patient-reported outcomes, which remain to be addressed.
Conflict of interest: none declared.
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