Robotic retroperitoneal lymph node dissection: a stepwise technical guide

Robotic RPLND is a technically demanding operation requiring exposure, template discipline, nerve preservation, and vascular control. This article presents a stepwise approach emphasizing peritoneal flap suspension, bowel exclusion, posterior plane development, and selective branch control.
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Springer London
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Robotic retroperitoneal lymph node dissection: a stepwise technical guide - Journal of Robotic Surgery

Retroperitoneal lymph node dissection remains a critical operation in selected patients with testicular cancer, including defined settings of early metastatic disease, post-chemotherapy residual masses, and emerging indications for primary retroperitoneal lymph node dissection in low-volume seminoma. Despite advances in minimally invasive surgery, this operation remains technically demanding because of its proximity to the great vessels, renal hilum, lumbar branches, ureters, and sympathetic neural structures. To present a standardized stepwise technical guide for robotic retroperitoneal lymph node dissection, emphasizing reproducible exposure, peritoneal flap suspension, nerve-aware dissection, posterior plane development, controlled vascular and lymphatic management. This technical report describes robotic retroperitoneal lymph node dissection as a sequential operative workflow. Key steps include patient positioning, port placement, mesenteric incision, creation of a broad L-shaped peritoneal flap, bilateral flap suspension, cephalad stay sutures, entry into the retroperitoneal template, early neural identification, split-and-roll dissection, posterior-first interaortocaval development, and selective clip-based control of vascular and lymphatic branches. The patient is positioned supine in Trendelenburg to facilitate bowel displacement. A broad peritoneal flap is developed and suspended to maintain durable exposure. Dissection proceeds using fixed anatomic landmarks, beginning with controlled access to stable avascular planes. Sympathetic fibers are identified early when nerve preservation is oncologically appropriate. Interaortocaval and para-aortic dissection are performed using a posterior-first strategy to improve orientation and permit deliberate management of lumbar vessels. Mechanical clip control is favored for lymphatic channels and higher-risk vascular branches. Robotic retroperitoneal lymph node dissection can be performed as a structured operation centered on exposure, orientation, neural preservation, posterior plane development, and selective vascular control. Standardization may improve technical clarity during this complex retroperitoneal procedure.

Retroperitoneal lymph node dissection remains a critical operation in selected patients with testicular cancer, including patients with early metastatic disease, post-chemotherapy residual masses, and emerging indications for primary RPLND in carefully selected low-volume seminoma. Although survival outcomes in testicular cancer are excellent, RPLND remains one of the most technically demanding procedures in urologic oncology because it requires precise dissection around the vena cava, aorta, renal vessels, iliac vessels, lumbar branches, ureters, lymphatic channels, and sympathetic neural structures.

This article presents a standardized stepwise technical guide to robotic RPLND, emphasizing reproducible exposure, durable bowel exclusion, nerve-aware dissection, posterior plane development, and selective vascular and lymphatic control. The operative workflow includes patient positioning, port placement, mesenteric incision, creation of a broad L-shaped peritoneal flap, bilateral flap suspension, cephalad stay sutures, entry into the retroperitoneal template, early sympathetic nerve identification, split-and-roll dissection, posterior-first interaortocaval development, and clip-based control of vascular and lymphatic branches.

A central principle of the technique is that exposure should be treated as a formal operative step rather than an intermittent challenge. Broad peritoneal flap development and suspension provide a stable working field, allowing the surgeon to maintain orientation throughout the case. Early identification of the sympathetic trunk allows nerve preservation when oncologically appropriate, while posterior-first development of the interaortocaval space improves orientation and facilitates deliberate management of lumbar vessels. Mechanical clip control is favored for lymphatic channels and higher-risk vascular branches, particularly near the renal hilum, common iliac crossing, and posterior great-vessel planes.

The robotic platform may enhance visualization, countertraction, and precision during complex retroperitoneal dissection; however, the safety of the operation depends primarily on disciplined exposure, anatomic orientation, template adherence, neural preservation, and vascular control. By translating robotic RPLND into a structured operative sequence, this technical report aims to improve clarity, reproducibility, and educational value for surgeons performing this challenging procedure in experienced centers.

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Testicular Cancer
Life Sciences > Biological Sciences > Cancer Biology > Cancers > Testicular Cancer
Testicular Cancer
Life Sciences > Health Sciences > Clinical Medicine > Diseases > Cancers > Testicular Cancer
Cancer Biology
Life Sciences > Biological Sciences > Cancer Biology
Minimally Invasive Surgery
Life Sciences > Health Sciences > Surgery > Minimally Invasive Surgery
Urological Surgery
Life Sciences > Health Sciences > Surgery > Urological Surgery
Surgery
Life Sciences > Health Sciences > Surgery

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