Innovations in minimally invasive surgery: lessons learned from translational animal models.

Fiche publication


Date publication

octobre 2013

Auteurs

Membres identifiés du Cancéropôle Est :
Pr MARESCAUX Jacques, Pr PESSAUX Patrick


Tous les auteurs :
Mutter D, Dallemagne B, Perretta S, Vix M, Leroy J, Pessaux P, Marescaux J

Résumé

PURPOSE: Animal models are key elements of surgical research and promotion of new techniques. Inanimate models, anatomical specimens, and living animals are all necessary to solve the various problems encountered by the advent of a new surgical technique. The development of Natural Orifice Transluminal Endoscopic Surgery (NOTES) procedures is a representative model. METHODS: Over 400 experimental procedures were performed in inanimate models, ex vivo tissues and animals to solve all problems faced by the development of NOTES surgery: peritoneal access, gastrotomy closure, exposure, retraction, dissection as well as education to start this new procedure. RESULTS: The successive use of all models allows to identify the ideal solution for each problem and to precisely define the safest and most reliable option to apply the new technique in patients. It allowed to perform the first transvaginal and transgastric cholecystectomy in patients in a safe way. CONCLUSION: Animal experimentation remains necessary as even sophisticated computer-based solutions are unable to model all interactions between molecules, cells, tissues, organisms, and their environment. Animal research is required in many areas to validate new technologies, develop training, let alone its major goal (namely to avoid using patients for experimentation) which is to be the first "model" for the surgeon.

Référence

Langenbecks Arch Surg. 2013 Oct;398(7):919-23