The evolution of kidney transplantation surgery into the robotic era and its prospects for obese recipients

Ahmer M. Hameed, Jinna Yao, Richard D. M. Allen, Wayne J. Hawthorne, Henry C. Pleass, Howard Lau

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

26 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Robotic-assisted kidney transplantation (RAKT) represents the most recent innovation in the evolution of kidney transplantation surgery. Vascular techniques enabling kidney transplantation have existed since the early 20th century and contributed to the first successful open kidney transplant procedure in 1954. Technical advances have since facilitated minimally invasive laparoscopic and robotic techniques in live-donor surgery, and subsequently for the recipient procedure. This review follows the development of surgical techniques for kidney transplantation, with a special focus on the advent of robotic-assisted transplantation because of its potential to facilitate transplantation of those deemed previously too obese to transplant by standard means. The different techniques, indications, advantages, disadvantages, and future directions of this approach will be explored in detail. Robot-assisted kidney transplantation may become the preferred means of transplanting morbidly obese recipients, although its availability to such recipients remains extremely limited and strategies targeting weight loss pretransplantation should never be abandoned in favor of a "RAKT-first" approach.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1650-1665
Number of pages16
JournalTransplantation
Volume102
Issue number10
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2018

Keywords

  • kidneys
  • robotics in medicine
  • surgical robots
  • transplantation

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