Surgery without external cuts called 'next
greatest surgical evolution.'
By Daniel J. DeNoon
WebMD Medical News
September, 2007 – French doctors
who report removing a woman's gallbladder through
her vagina say such "no-scar surgery" may be the
wave of the future.
At least two U.S. women -- one at
New York Presbyterian Hospital and another at the
University of California San Diego Medical Center --
have undergone similar surgeries.
Doctors who advocate the technique
call it "natural orifice transluminal endoscopic
surgery" or NOTES. "Natural orifice" here means the
vagina, the anus, or the mouth. "Transluminal" means
surgeons insert surgical tools (endoscopic tools)
through the body's natural openings. And the
"surgery" part means doctors still have to cut
through to the inside of the body and to operate on
diseased organs.
The idea is to eliminate big
incisions -- and surgical scars -- and to speed
recovery after surgery.
Jacques Marescaux, MD, and
colleagues at Louis Pasteur University in
Strasbourg, France, appear to have been the first to
perform NOTES surgery without backup from the
laparoscopic instruments used for conventional
minimally invasive surgery.
"With its invisible mending and
tremendous potential for improving patient care and
well-being, NOTES might represent the next greatest
surgical evolution," Marescaux and colleagues
suggest.
The surgeons report details of the
operation in the September issue of Archives of
Surgery.
Fast Recovery After Natural
Orifice Surgery
Marescaux and colleagues performed
the NOTES gallbladder removal on a 30-year-old woman
with gallstones. The surgeons used endoscopic tools
inserted through the woman's vagina during general
anesthesia.
To reach the gallbladder, the
surgeons made a small incision at the rear of the
woman's vagina. The only external incision was a
tiny cut in the woman's abdomen to insert a needle
scope (the cut was also used to inflate the
abdominal cavity with gas and to aid in removal of
the gallbladder). The gallbladder was removed
through the vagina.
On the evening after surgery, the
woman felt well enough to go home. Because she was
their first NOTES patient, her doctors kept her
overnight and she left the hospital the next
morning. Ten days later, the woman had resumed full
activity with no discomfort, discharge, or bleeding.
Doctors developing the NOTES
technique say similar operations could be done by
mouth. However, this would mean making a cut in the
stomach or gut to get to internal organs. Research
continues on the best way to make sure these cuts
can be closed without risk of leakage.
A group of surgeons has formed the
Natural Orifice Surgery Consortium for Assessment
and Research -- NOSCAR -- to promote NOTES research
and responsible use of the technique. The group
hopes to develop better techniques and better
medical tools for NOTES surgeries.
NOTES vs. Laparoscopy
The NOSCAR group obviously is
promoting the "no scar" aspect of NOTES. But current
minimally invasive laparoscopic surgical techniques
already leave no lasting scar, says John G. Hunter,
MD, professor and chairman of surgery at Oregon
Health & Science University in Portland.
"Having had laparoscopic surgery
myself, and as a laparoscopic surgeon, I can tell
you there are no scars within six months to a year
of the operation," Hunter tells WebMD. "To suggest
laparoscopy is scarring and NOTES isn't is not
accurate."
Hunter also questions whether
recovery time is truly longer with minimally
invasive surgery than for NOTES.
Hunter's editorial comments
accompany the Marescaux report in the Archives of
Surgery.
"The benefits of NOTES are not
earthshaking and the risks are real," he writes. "Marescaux
and colleagues. You have (again) put man on the
moon. Now we need to figure out if there is any
reason to populate this new plane."
Hunter is all too aware of how
this makes him sound. As a young surgeon advocating
minimally invasive surgery, he remembers being told
by older surgeons that he was wasting his time.
"They said laparoscopy would never
fly -- and they were completely wrong," he
remembers.
While Hunter doesn't think that
NOTES will end up being the best way to perform
gallbladder operations, he does see ways the
technique could, in the future, improve a number of
surgical procedures.
"There is a lot of great
opportunity here," he says. "I don't see NOTES as
revolutionary. It might be incrementally better for
some things. It is evolution rather than revolution
at this point."
© WebMD Inc. All rights reserved.