HCM City (VNS/VNA) – Doctors at Binh Dan
Hospital in Ho Chi Minh City used a robot to assist surgery in late April to
remove a cancerous tumour from a 70-year-old Vietnamese woman from the Mekong
Delta province of Tien Giang.
The tumour was removed by the retroperitoneal
route because it avoided harm to her abdominal organs and reduced risks for gut
paralysis.
The woman had previously had an ovariotomy and
cholecystectomy (gallbladder removal), and surgery to remove her appendix and a
uterine fibroid. The patient also had diabetes and hepatitis C.
The hospital’s doctors spoke to the patient’s
relatives about robot-assisted procedures as well as traditionally open and
laparoscopic surgeries. The family chose the robotic surgery because it was the
best solution to avoid complications since the doctors did not have to open the
peritonaeum.
Surgery that uses robots is less invasive and
uses smaller incisions than normal surgical methods. It reduces pain, bleeding,
infections and the length of hospital stay.
With manoeuverable wrists rotating through 540
degrees and a 3-D camera providing a view of healthy and suspicious tissues,
the doctors were able to view kidney structures and more precisely operate and
remove the on her right kidney.
Dr Do Lenh Hung of the hospital, who performed
the two-hour surgery on April 23, said it was difficult surgery because of the
need to master the technique of using a robot.
The patient was discharged from the hospital and
is currently recovering at home.
Kidney cancer is the ninth most commonly
occurring cancer in men and the 14th most common cancer in women. There were
over 400,000 new cases in 2018, according to the non-profit organisation World
Cancer Research Fund International, a network of cancer prevention charities
with a global reach.
The average age of patients when they are
diagnosed is 64, according to the American Cancer Society. Kidney cancer is
very uncommon in people younger than age 45.
Overall, the lifetime risk for developing kidney
cancer in men is about 1 in 48. The lifetime risk for women is 1 in 83.
The International Agency for Research on
Cancer’s 2018 GLOBOCAN report showed that Vietnam had 2,394 new incidences of
kidney cancer, including 1,326 deaths.-VNS/VNA
Source: VietnamPlus