Impact of morbid obesity on surgical and oncological outcomes in patients with endometrial cancer undergoing robotic assisted laparoscopic hysterectomy and pelvic lymph node staging

Camille Mimoun · 2025-03-30

Minimally invasive surgery is the preferred surgical approach in endometrial cancer. Robotic assisted laparoscopy could provide benefits in the obese population. To compare surgical and oncological outcomes between patients with a BMI < 35 kg/m This retrospective monocentric study was conducted at Saint-Louis University Hospital in Paris. The two groups were compared using a univariate analysis. 52 patients were included, 39 patients in Group 1 and 13 patients in Group 2. Operative room occupancy time and operative time were significantly longer in Group 2 than in Group 1 (255.1 min ± 57.0 vs 210.5 min ± 38.3, p = 0.02 and 166.8 min ± 39.7 vs 139.6 min ± 35.3, p = 0.04 respectively). No significant difference was found in length of hospital stay between the 2 groups even if it appears that patients in Group 2 had slightly longer hospitalization than patients in Group 1 (2 days vs 1 day). Only one complication (laparotomy conversion for digestive injury) was observed in Group 2. No significant difference was found in recurrence between the 2 groups. Severe morbid obesity does not affect surgical morbidity or oncological outcomes in women with endometrial cancer who underwent robotic-assisted laparoscopic hysterectomy, bilateral adnexectomy, and pelvic lymph node staging. Optimizing operating room occupancy management must be improved in this patient population.
TL;DR

Severe morbid obesity does not affect surgical morbidity or oncological outcomes in women with endometrial cancer who underwent robotic-assisted laparoscopic hysterectomy, bilateral adnexectomy, and pelvic lymph node staging and Optimizing operating room occupancy management must be improved in this patient population.

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