Influence of Otolaryngological Subspecialties on Perception of Transoral Robotic Surgery: An International YO-IFOS Survey
Maniaci, A.; Chiesa Estomba, Carlos Miguel; Fakhry, N.; Vaira, L.A.; Remacle, M.; Cammaroto, G.; Barillari, M.R.; Iannella, G.; Mayo Yañez, Miguel; 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.

Identificadores
Identificadores
Visualización o descarga de ficheros
Visualización o descarga de ficheros
Fecha de publicación
2023Título de revista
Journal of Personalized Medicine
Tipo de contenido
Artigo
Resumen
Background: To investigate perception, adoption, and awareness on the part of otolaryngology and head and neck surgeons (OTO-HNS) of transoral robotic surgery (TORS). Methods: 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. Results: 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. Conclusions: Perception, adoption, and knowledge about TORS play a key role in the application of the robotic system, significantly varying across subspecialties.
Excepto si se señala otra cosa, la licencia del ítem se describe como Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0)
