Single-Use Energy Sources and Operating Room Time for Laparoscopic Hysterectomy: A Randomized Controlled Trial

Journal of minimally invasive gynecology, 23(1), 72-77

DOI 10.1016/j.jmig.2015.08.881 PMID 26318400 Source

Abstract

STUDY

Objectives

To compare the intraoperative direct costs of a single-use energy device with reusable energy devices during laparoscopic hysterectomy.

Design

A randomized controlled trial (Canadian Task Force Classification I).

Setting

An academic hospital.

Patients

Forty-six women who underwent laparoscopic hysterectomy from March 2013 to September 2013.

Interventions

Each patient served as her own control. One side of the uterine attachments was desiccated and transected with the single-use device (Ligasure 5-mm Blunt Tip LF1537 with the Force Triad generator). The other side was desiccated and transected with reusable bipolar forceps (RoBi 5 mm), and transected with monopolar scissors using the same Covidien Force Triad generator. The instrument approach used was randomized to the attending physician who was always on the patient's left side. Resident physicians always operated on the patient's right side and used the converse instruments of the attending physician. MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN

Results

Start time was recorded at the utero-ovarian pedicle and end time was recorded after transection of the uterine artery on the same side. Costs included the single-use device; amortized costs of the generator, reusable instruments, and cords; cleaning and packaging of reusable instruments; and disposal of the single-use device. Operating room time was $94.14/min. We estimated that our single use-device cost $630.14 and had a total time savings of 6.7 min per case, or 3.35 min per side, which could justify the expense of the device. The single-use energy device had significant median time savings (-4.7 min per side, p < .001) and total intraoperative direct cost savings ($254.16 per case).

Conclusions

A single-use energy device that both desiccates and cuts significantly reduced operating room time to justify its own cost, and it also reduced total intraoperative direct costs during laparoscopic hysterectomy in our institution. Operating room cost per minute varies between institutions and must be considered before generalizing our results.

Topics

laparoscopic hysterectomy energy devices, ligasure versus bipolar forceps, single-use surgical instruments cost, operating room time efficiency, reusable versus disposable energy devices, minimally invasive hysterectomy technique, surgical energy device comparison, laparoscopy operative time, cost analysis hysterectomy devices, electrosurgical instruments randomized trial, intraoperative cost reduction, laparoscopic surgery instrumentation

Cite this article

Holloran-Schwartz, M. B., Gavard, J. A., Martin, J. C., Blaskiewicz, R. J., & Yeung PP Jr (2015). Single-Use Energy Sources and Operating Room Time for Laparoscopic Hysterectomy: A Randomized Controlled Trial. *Journal of minimally invasive gynecology*, *23*(1), 72-77. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jmig.2015.08.881

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