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Influence of Otolaryngological Subspecialties on Perception of Transoral Robotic Surgery: An International YO-IFOS Survey.
Influence of Otolaryngological Subspecialties on Perception of Transoral Robotic Surgery: An International YO-IFOS Survey. Journal of personalized medicine Maniaci, A., Chiesa Estomba, C., Fakhry, N., Vaira, L. A., Remacle, M., Cammaroto, G., Barillari, M. R., Iannella, G., Mayo-Yanez, M., Saibene, A. M., Baudouin, R., Maza-Solano, J., Mendelsohn, A. H., Holsinger, F. C., Ceccon, F. P., Haddad, L., Hans, S., La Mantia, I., Cocuzza, S., Gulinello, F., Ayad, T., Lechien, J. R. 2023; 13 (12)Abstract
To investigate perception, adoption, and awareness on the part of otolaryngology and head and neck surgeons (OTO-HNS) of transoral robotic surgery (TORS).Several items assessed: awareness/perception; access to TORS; training; indications and advantages/hurdles to TORS practice. A subanalysis was performed to assess differences according to the identified otolaryngological subspecialties.A total of 359 people completed the survey. Among subspecialties, while for otolaryngologists 30/359 (8.4%) and H&N surgeons 100/359 (27.9%) TORS plays an effective role in hospital stay, laryngologists frequently disagreed (54.3%). There was a lower incidence among rhinologists and otologists (1.9%). Pediatric surgeons (0.8%) reported a positive response regarding the adoption of robotic surgery, and head and neck specialists expressed an even greater response (14.2%). Low adherence was related to perceived cost-prohibitive TORS, by 50% of H&N surgeons.Perception, adoption, and knowledge about TORS play a key role in the application of the robotic system, significantly varying across subspecialties.
View details for DOI 10.3390/jpm13121717
View details for PubMedID 38138944
View details for PubMedCentralID PMC10744671