Documents robotic-assisted procedures with system setup, docking, console time, and conversion criteria. Use when documenting robotic procedures, recording system parameters, or noting robotic-specific complications.
Documents robotic-assisted procedures with system setup, docking, console time, and conversion criteria.
Robotic-assisted surgery has expanded rapidly across surgical specialties, with over 1.2 million robotic procedures performed annually in the US. Documentation requirements for robotic cases are substantially more complex than standard laparoscopic procedures due to the involvement of a multi-million dollar platform, specialized credentialing requirements, device-specific safety events, and unique complication profiles. The Joint Commission requires documentation of equipment used during procedures, and institutions must track robotic utilization, outcomes, and credentialing compliance for privileging reviews.
Intuitive Surgical (da Vinci), Medtronic (Hugo), and other robotic manufacturers require specific documentation for warranty, maintenance, and adverse event reporting. The FDA MedWatch system mandates reporting of robotic device malfunctions that result in or could have resulted in patient harm. Incomplete robotic documentation creates credentialing vulnerability, device safety gaps, and medicolegal exposure. This skill standardizes robotic surgery documentation to meet clinical, regulatory, credentialing, and device-specific requirements.
Document the following system-specific information:
| Element | Documentation | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Platform and model | Full system name, model number | da Vinci Xi, SN 12345 |
| Software version | Current software version | V 4.0.x |
| Number of arms used | Total arms active | 4 arms (3 operative + 1 camera) |
| Arm assignments | Which instrument on which arm | Arm 1: monopolar scissors, Arm 2: ProGrasp, Arm 3: bipolar fenestrated |
| Camera type | 0° or 30° lens, 8mm or 12mm | 30° down, 8mm scope |
| Energy modality | Monopolar, bipolar, vessel sealer | Arm 1: monopolar cautery, Arm 2: Vessel Sealer Extend |
| Firefly (ICG) | Used or not, indication | Firefly used for ICG angiography to assess tissue perfusion |
Document each port with:
Example documentation:
Port 1 (camera): 8mm robotic port, placed supraumbilical via optical entry, Arm 3 (camera)
Port 2: 8mm robotic port, right upper quadrant, MCL at costal margin, Arm 1 (monopolar scissors)
Port 3: 8mm robotic port, left upper quadrant, MCL at costal margin, Arm 2 (ProGrasp)
Port 4: 8mm robotic port, right lateral, AAL at level of umbilicus, Arm 4 (bipolar)
Port 5: 12mm assistant port, right lower quadrant, placed under direct vision
Track and document key time intervals:
| Time Point | Definition | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Patient in room | Wheels in OR | 07:30 |
| Anesthesia start | Induction begins | 07:40 |
| Incision time | First port access | 08:10 |
| Robot roll-in | Cart positioned | 08:20 |
| Docking start | First arm docked | 08:22 |
| Docking complete | All arms docked, ready for console | 08:30 |
| Console time start | Surgeon begins operating at console | 08:32 |
| Console time end | Surgeon leaves console | 10:15 |
| Undocking | Arms released from ports | 10:17 |
| Robot roll-out | Cart moved away from patient | 10:20 |
| Closure start | Begin closing ports/incisions | 10:22 |
| Procedure end | Last suture/dressing | 10:35 |
| Patient out of room | Wheels out of OR | 10:55 |
Key metrics to calculate and document:
In addition to standard operative report technique elements, document:
If conversion from robotic to laparoscopic or open occurs, document:
| Element | Required Documentation |
|---|---|
| Reason for conversion | Specific clinical reason (e.g., adhesions preventing safe dissection, hemorrhage requiring manual compression, equipment failure, anatomy not amenable to robotic approach) |
| Time of conversion | Clock time and elapsed console time |
| Type of conversion | Robotic → laparoscopic, robotic → open, robotic → hand-assisted |
| Decision maker | Surgeon who made the conversion decision |
| Patient status | Hemodynamically stable vs. emergent conversion |
| Equipment changes | Instruments, tray sets opened |
| Outcome | Procedure completed vs. aborted |
Critical: Conversion to open or laparoscopic is a clinical decision, not a failure. Document the rationale clearly and objectively. Do not use language suggesting error or poor judgment (e.g., "forced to convert"). Use language like "conversion was performed for patient safety due to..."
Conversion rate tracking by surgeon is a credentialing metric. Typical benchmarks:
If any system fault occurs during the case, document:
Report to FDA (MedWatch Form 3500A) if the device malfunction:
Document instrument usage for lifecycle management:
Maintain for each surgeon: