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The Role of Scarless Procedures in Urology: A Review of Literature

Kahie AA

Aga Khan University Hospital, Nairobi

Correspondence to: Dr. Aideed A Kahie, P.O Box 15301-00100 Nairobi, Nairobi.

Email: aideed@kaatun.com

Abstract

The popularity of natural orifice transluminal endoscopic surgery (NOTES) or ‘scarless” surgery has been steadily increasing in the recent urological literature, as a new surgical intervention to access intra-peritoneal organs. NOTES comes with the promise of both scar less and painless postoperative procedures. It utilizes one or more patent natural body orifices with the intention to penetrate a hollow viscous to access the abdomen. It is believed to be the natural progression of laparoscopy, although currently available tools or instruments do not permit a holistic NOTES procedure. There are considerable limitations to the retraction of organs, bleeding control, and handling of instruments with this method. For this reason, the ‘hybrid’ technique, where a luminal approach is combined with abdominal ports is currently gaining ground. This technique may be the preferred choice for living donor nephrectomy in high volume centers. As a relatively novel procedure, not many studies exist comparing the relative advantages of NOTES over conventional laparoscopy. An assessment of the existing literature on this technique, as pertains to urology, has been undertaken in this article.

 

Keywords: Natural Orifices Transluminal Endoscopic Surgery, NOTES, Scarless Surgery, Urology

Ann Afr Surg. 2016;13(1):24-28

Introduction

The development of minimal access surgery (MAS) over the past two decades has eclipsed many traditional open operations. MAS has reduced morbidity, enabled early return to normal activities and has improved scar appearance (1,2). In a bid to optimize these gains, further reduce the impact of surgical trauma and to enhance cosmesis, a scarless intervention has emerged. In this technique, the peritoneal cavity is entered without abdominal wall violation, and the procedure completed with no appreciable abdominal scar (3). This marked the birth of natural orifice transluminal endoscopic surgery (NOTES).

NOTES utilizes the natural openings of the body and the luminal viscous. Piercing the viscous allow access to the target organ in the abdominal cavity. The patient entry points include the mouth, anus, vagina, nares and urethra. The luminal viscera punctured are the esophagus, stomach, colon/ rectum, bladder and vagina (Figure 1) (5). The lack of surgical incision potentially translates into reduced wound infection and postoperative pain

(6). This intervention has been demonstrated to be effective, reliable and reproducible (7).

 

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With the initial execution of laparoscopic radical nephrectomy in 1993, MAS has found a fertile specialty in which major urological operations like radical prostatectomy, partial nephrectomy, radical and partial cytectomies have been demystified laparoscopically (11-14). In urology, NOTES has been completed experimentally through trans-gastric, trans-colonic, trans-vesical and trans-vaginal routes.

Lima and co-workers described the trans-luminal vesical route in a porcine model in 2011 while Gettman et al. using porcine model, were able to perform a trans-vaginal nephrectomy in 2001 (Figure 1)

Pai et al. demonstrated the use of a trans-colonic port, whose applicability was however limited by its inherent bacterial load (16). Bazzi et al. described the possibility of a trans-rectal NOTES nephrectomy in porcine and cadaveric models (17,18).

This review evaluates the role of NOTES, its history and application and the platforms currently available for its practice in the field of urology.

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in a human being (23-25). Breda et al. retrieved a non-functional kidney through the vagina, while Gill and co-workers reported vaginal kidney extractions following laparoscopic nephrectomy with comparable morbidity to conventional port extraction (10,26,27).

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Methods

A detailed literature review using Medline/Pubmed data base search was done to identify published peer-reviewed articles, which describe NOTES from a urological perspective. The search was limited to the articles published in the last 10 years in the English literature. Search terms NOTES and urology, NOTES in urology were used. Search results were screened for studies with particular emphasis on clinical studies and reviews.

 

Results

NOTES Progression: From Concept to Application Since the first description of NOTES by Kalloo and co-workers in 2004 in porcine experiments, it has curved out a niche for itself in the ever-expanding field of minimal access surgery (3). The Society of American Gastrointestinal and Endoscopic Surgeons (SAGES) and the American Society for Gastrointestinal Endoscopy (ASGE) put together a working group on NOTES to define its nomenclature, surgical description and potential role in surgery advancement (19). The SAGES/ASGE consensus paper emphasized the need for a team approach and the awareness of current interventions presented by NOTES (19).

The major advantage of NOTES for the urologist is the use of a flexible endoscope which urologists are quite familiar with in their daily practice (Figure 3). This potentially enhances its acceptability and training amongst this group of surgeons (17,20-22). In clinical practice Sotelo et al. and Kaouk et al. reported the first successful trans-vaginal NOTES radical nephrectomy

NOTES: The Approach

The steps taken to access the viscera are universal and include: a) luminal access through a patent orifice with an endoscope; b) viscerotomy with a needle knife; c) placement of a guide wire using the Seldinger technique; d) dilating the tract with a balloon over the wire; e) placement of catheter, overtube over the wire and CO2 insufflation; f) scope advancement; g) completion of procedure; h) closure of viscerotomy (28). When a NOTES procedure is combined with the advanced endoscopy, it presents an exciting mode of management of urologic disease. However, sole use of NOTES instruments has been criticized due to their excessive flexibility, and the impossibility of retracting solid organs. There is also limited port access for the use of hemostatic devices, frequent displacement of the surgical field from the visual space with every rotation of the scope and the need to close the internal organ that was punctured to contain potential intra-peritoneal contamination (29-31).

To overcome these technical hurdles, many authors have coupled NOTES with conventional laparoscopy (Figure 4). This necessitated change of nomenclature and the emergence of ‘hybrid’ NOTES and NOTES-assisted surgery in 2008 (5). When ports are passed trans-abdominally, but the bulk of the procedure (over 75%) is executed with the luminal scope it’s designated as ‘hybrid’ procedure. Conversely when most of the procedure is done laparoscopically and tissue extracted through an orifice or an orifice used as an additional port site it’s referred to as NOTES-assisted (5).

 

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This combination affords spatial orientation through camera vision (laparoscopically), instrument triangulation, tissue retraction and dissection (32). Nowadays a range of surgical procedures are carried out using a myriad of different entry points. For instance, the trans-vaginal nephrectomy with a peri-umblical port for controlled visualization is termed the ‘hybrid’ transgastric-transvaginal nephrectomy (15,33). Using the transvesical route to access both thoracic and intraabdominal organs when the thoracoscope or umblical ports are added is also possible (34-36). Porcine experiments on the feasibility of a transureteric ‘hybrid’ NOTES nephrectomy have also been documented by Baldwin et al (37).

NOTES: The Training

Universal acceptance of newer interventions is always a challenge, and the European and American NOTES working groups recommended a research-oriented team approach (22). This team includes surgeons, urologists, gynecologists and gastroenterologists with endoscopic expertise. A standardized training program focusing on research, instrument familiarization, simulators and dry lab before attempting procedures involving humans must be developed (22,38). NOTES training should also incorporate the new robotic instruments and nanotechnology devices, which give the surgeon flexibility and the stability of instruments to carry out retraction, dissection and suturing (39). Surgical training for NOTES shall be limited by its potential steep learning curve pertaining instrumentation through orifices and lack of long term clinical data concerning safety and efficacy. Multidisciplinary close coordination with other surgical subspecialties and gynecologists will help establish safe access and in developing training program.

NOTES: The Urological Application

Since hybrid NOTES nephrectomy was described by Branco et al other investigators have documented their experience with this procedure (23,24,34,40). At the Cleveland clinic, Kaouk et al. have successfully done the first transvaginal ‘pure’ NOTES nephrectomy in a female patient with an atrophic right kidney (25). Castillo and others, subsequently followed with two transvaginal ‘hybrid’ NOTES simple nephrectomies (40). The vagina has been accepted as a viable retrieval route for laparoscopic nephrectomies since its description by Breda et al (26). Colpotomy closure is superior to transgastric or transcolonic with a load of large gynecological literature supporting its use for intraperitoneal access with minimal complication rate. The vagina also allows easier retrieval of large specimen, enables use of rigid instruments for working and camera ports.

Apart from transvaginal non-oncological kidney retrieval, a team in Hospital Clinic in Spain reported transvaginal NOTES-assisted laparoscopic nephrectomies for a T1-T3a,N0M0 renal cancer (17,41). The limitations to the vaginal route is in its potential peritoneal contamination, possible previous gynecological pelvic surgery and the unavailability to the male sex; approximately more than 50% of the population (41).

Another potentially successful NOTES utilization in urology is the living donor nephrectomy and instrumentation/retrieval through the transvaginal port (42,43). Although this is intended to reduce trauma of living donation, it is unfortunately limited to only the female population. Allaf et al. described a vaginal extraction of laparoscopic living donor nephrectomy in 2009 while the Spanish Hospital Clinic team have done over fifty transvaginal NOTES-assisted living donor nephrectomies to date (42,44,45). They reported no effect on warm ischemia and graft function compared to conventional laparoscopic nephrectomy (45).

NOTES: Its Future in Urology

The European Association for Endoscopic Surgery and the European Society of Gastrointestinal Endoscopy, together with their counterpart American Urology Working Group have illustrated their targeted goals and their vision for NOTES as; a) to increase NOTES awareness in urology, b) to provide a platform where discoveries related to urological NOTES is shared, c) to guide scientific evaluation and implementation of urological NOTES, and d) to define nomenclature of urological NOTES. Their determination is to safely and progressively enable utilization of NOTES in urology (19,35). Being a new modality, its safety and efficacy has not been proven in randomized trials. Even while living donor nephrectomy is gaining popularity, there are misgivings about potential dyspareunia, vaginal cuff hematoma and infection (local and peritoneal).

Specific limitations that may pose challenges to the growth of NOTES as expressed earlier include lack of purpose built instruments, safety concern of transluminal access, suboptimal optical visualization, poor tissue grasping and manipulation and significant surgeon’s fatigue.

 

Conclusion

While NOTES lays claim to be the most minimal access surgery, it still remains investigational in urology. The current available tools do not allow the safe execution of a procedure by a pure NOTES approach. The new concept of hybrid approach may be the valid alternative to improve morbidity and enhance cosmesis. Prospective randomized trials are awaited to evaluate its benefits and cost-effectiveness. Use of robotic tools and customized instruments may improve ergonomics and facilitate training with a shorter learning curve.

 

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