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Mammana et al. Mini-invasive Surg 2020;4:37  I  http://dx.doi.org/10.20517/2574-1225.2020.24                                    Page 5 of 7

               Table 1. Main published series of robotic thymectomy for myasthenia gravis
                Ref.          Year     No.     Approach  Complete remission rate (%)  Morbidity (%)  Mortality (%)
                Freeman et al. [20]  2011  75   Left             28                6.7           0
                Ismail et al. [19]  2013  273   Left             57                1.6           0
                Marulli et al. [21]  2013  100  Left             28.5              6.0           0
                Keijzers et al. [22]  2015  125  Right           28.2              7.2           0
                Kumar et al. [23]  2017  71     Left             38                7.0           0

               Right-sided approach
               The mediastinal pleura is incised just anterior and medial to the right phrenic nerve, starting from the
               cardiophrenic angle and progressing upwards, and all anterior mediastinal tissue is separated from the
               nerve and the superior vena cava. The retrosternal parietal pleura is then opened medial and parallel to
               the right internal mammary vessels, and mediastinal tissue is dissected off the sternum anteriorly and the
               pericardium posteriorly, until the left brachiocephalic vein is identified. The thymic veins are identified,
               clipped, and dissected. The superior horns are then identified and divided from the thyroid gland. The
               left pleura is then opened and after the left phrenic nerve is identified, the dissection of the thymus is
               completed and the specimen is extracted as described above.

               OUTCOMES OF ROBOTIC THYMECTOMY
               The safety profile of RATS thymectomy seems excellent, with a morbidity rate ranging between 1.6% to 7.2%
               and no perioperative mortality in any of the studies [Table 1]. The most commonly reported complications
               include myasthenic crisis, bleeding and chylothorax [19-23] . In terms of postoperative results (blood loss,
               morbidity rate and length of hospital stay), several single-center case series have demonstrated better
               outcomes with RATS than with open thymectomy [24-26] . A multicenter study from the French database
               EPITHOR confirmed that patients undergoing thymectomy with minimally invasive procedures (mostly
               RATS) had fewer postoperative complications and a shorter hospital stay compared to patients operated
                               [27]
               on by sternotomy . However, because of important disparities in baseline patients’ characteristics, no
                                                                                         [27]
               firm conclusions about the superiority of one technique over the other could be drawn . Finally, a recent
               systematic review compared postoperative outcomes after thymectomy by RATS or VATS, and found no
                                                                                           [28]
               significant difference in terms of morbidity, conversion to open and length of hospital stay .

               As far as neurological outcomes are concerned, in general, non-surgical factors that are believed to decrease
               the effectiveness of thymectomy in palliating symptoms of MG are the presence of thymoma (as compared
                                                                                       [29]
               with thymic hyperplasia), duration of symptoms longer than 1 year, and older age . The completeness
               of removal of all thymic foci, on the other hand, is the single most important surgery-dependent variable
               that influences postoperative neurological outcomes [10,11] . Unfortunately, because of differences in surgical
               approaches and operative techniques, it is not always easy to determine the extent of removal of thymic
               tissue from retrospective studies. In an attempt to overcome this issue, the following definitions have
               been proposed: basic thymectomy includes the removal of the thymic gland without any surrounding fat;
               extended thymectomy includes removal of the thymus with surrounding fatty tissue of the neck and the
               mediastinum ; finally, the maximally extended thymectomy procedure, proposed by Jaretski, consists
                           [30]
               in removal of the thymus with all mediastinal fat, from the level of the upper poles of the thyroid gland
                                                                 [10]
               to the diaphragm, with opening of both pleural cavities . Clearly, the maximally extended procedure
               is recommended to achieve the highest remission rates. Zielinski and colleagues, in fact, have compared
               neurological outcomes of patients who underwent thymectomy according to 3 different techniques,
               demonstrating better complete remission rates in the group of patients treated by the most radical operative
               technique .
                        [31]
               Following robotic thymectomy, all authors report satisfying complete remission rates, with values ranging
               from 28% to 57% [19-23] . These results are in line with complete remission rates achieved by transsternal
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