Mode of Minimally Invasive Surgery Associated with Venous Thromboembolism Incidence in Gynecologic Cancer Patients

Terry Kara & Christa Aubrey et al. · 2025-11-22

Postoperative venous thromboembolism (VTE) after minimally invasive surgery (MIS) for gynecologic malignancy is uncommon. Our objective was to characterize the rates and identify risk factors of postoperative VTE. A retrospective cohort study of patients undergoing MIS for gynecologic malignancy at three Canadian institutions from 2014 to 2020 was performed. The primary outcome was incidence of VTE within 90 days post-operatively. Descriptive statistics were used for clinicopathologic factors, and univariate analysis compared differences between groups. Rate and 95% confidence interval for VTE per 1000 surgeries were calculated. A total of 1786 patients met inclusion criteria, 85.3% uterine, 11.5% cervical, and 2.3% had ovarian cancer. Modes of surgery included robotic (49.4%), laparoscopic (20.7%), or combined laparoscopic/vaginal (29.9%). There were 15 VTE events at 90 days post-operatively (0.84%). Rates of VTE were lowest in patients who underwent robotic surgery, followed by combined laparoscopic/vaginal, and highest in a laparoscopic approach (p = 0.047). Pelvic lymphadenectomy (p = 0.038) and adjuvant chemotherapy (p = 0.022) were the only significant factors associated with risk of VTE. The incidence of VTE after MIS for gynecologic malignancy is low. Robotic surgery was associated with a lower incidence, although event rates are low, and further research is warranted.