Robotic-assisted percutaneous coronary intervention: experience in Switzerland.

Häner, Jonas D; Räber, Lorenz; Moro, Christina; Losdat, Sylvain; Windecker, Stephan (2023). Robotic-assisted percutaneous coronary intervention: experience in Switzerland. Frontiers in cardiovascular medicine, 10, p. 1294930. Frontiers 10.3389/fcvm.2023.1294930

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AIMS OF THE STUDY

Percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) exposes operators to ionizing radiation. Robotic-assisted PCI (RA-PCI) is a novel technology that enables interventional cardiologists to operate coronary devices remotely from a radiation-shed cockpit. The aim of this study is to describe the experience and challenges during the initiation of a RA-PCI program and to report outcomes of the first 21 patients undergoing RA-PCI in Switzerland.

METHODS

All patients undergoing RA-PCI using the CorPath GRX Vascular Robotic System between 06/2021 and 12/2021 at Inselspital, Bern University Hospital were included in this retrospective registry study. Baseline, procedural and clinical follow-up data were prospectively assessed as part of the Cardiobase Bern PCI registry (NCT02241291). The two endpoints of interest were clinical success [defined as <30% residual diameter stenosis in the absence of in-hospital major adverse cardiovascular events (MACE: composite of death, periprocedural myocardial infarction, target-vessel revascularization, and stroke)] and robotic success (defined as clinical success and completion of RA-PCI without or with partial manual assistance). Additional outcome measures include clinical long-term outcomes at one year.

RESULTS

Twenty-five lesions in 21 patients were treated with RA-PCI (age 62.4 ± 9.1 years, 24% female). Clinical success was achieved in 100%, and robotic success in 81% (17/21 procedures, including 4 procedures requiring partial manual assistance). Manual conversion (e.g. manual completion of the procedure) occurred in 19% (4 procedures). Reasons for manual assistance or conversion were poor guiding-catheter back-up or platform limitations (4), adverse events (2x transient slow-flow that was solved manually), safety decision (1x vasovagal reaction not related to robotic approach), and software error (1). No in-hospital MACE occurred. During 12 months of follow-up, one patient suffered a non-target-vessel myocardial infarction requiring repeat PCI.

CONCLUSIONS

RA-PCI can safely be performed without clinically relevant robot-associated complications in selected patients with approximately 80% of procedures conducted without or with partial manual assistance.

Item Type:

Journal Article (Original Article)

Division/Institute:

04 Faculty of Medicine > Department of Cardiovascular Disorders (DHGE) > Clinic of Cardiology
04 Faculty of Medicine > Pre-clinic Human Medicine > Department of Clinical Research (DCR)

UniBE Contributor:

Häner, Jonas, Räber, Lorenz, Losdat, Sylvain Pierre, Windecker, Stephan

Subjects:

600 Technology > 610 Medicine & health

ISSN:

2297-055X

Publisher:

Frontiers

Language:

English

Submitter:

Pubmed Import

Date Deposited:

20 Dec 2023 16:04

Last Modified:

20 Feb 2024 14:15

Publisher DOI:

10.3389/fcvm.2023.1294930

PubMed ID:

38116535

Uncontrolled Keywords:

Swiss experience manual assistance manual conversion procedural success robotic-assisted percutaneous coronary intervention

BORIS DOI:

10.48350/190590

URI:

https://boris.unibe.ch/id/eprint/190590

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