Wednesday, June 18, 2025 - A doctor in Florida, USA, has successfully performed surgery on a cancer patient located thousands of miles away in Angola, Africa, using a robot.
Vipul Patel, the medical director of the Global Robotic
Institute at Advent Health in Orlando, conducted a prostatectomy—surgery that
removes part or all of the prostate—on Fernando da Silva from Angola, as
reported by ABC News medical correspondent Dr. Darien Sutton on Tuesday, June
17.
Da Silva, 67, was diagnosed with prostate cancer in March,
and in June, Patel used transcontinental robotic telesurgery to remove the
cancerous tissue.
Prostate cancer is very prevalent in Africa, Patel told the
Network, adding, “In the past, they really haven’t monitored it well or they
haven’t had treatments.”
The doctor said this surgery was a long time coming, and it
was a success.
“We’ve been working on this really for two years,” Patel said. "We travelled the globe, looking at the right technologies."
Da Silva was the first patient in a human clinical trial
approved by the Food and Drug Administration to test this technology.
Surgeons have used a multimillion-dollar robot to operate on
patients using “enhanced visuals and nimble controls” before, ABC News
reported, but they are often near their patients when operating the
machine.
Patel used fibre optic cables to test the technology at a
long distance from his patient. “There was no perceptible delay in my brain,”
the doctor said.
His surgical team was in the operating room with Da Silva
just in case they had to jump in.
"We made sure we had plan A, B, C, and D. I always have
my team where the patient is," the doctor said.
In case something went awry with the telecommunications,
"the team would just take over and finish the case and do it safely,” he
said.
Reflecting on the surgery, Patel called it “a small step for
a surgeon, but it was huge leap for health care.”
He said the “humanitarian implications are enormous.”
"Internationally, obviously, there's so many
underserved areas of the world,” the doctor said, adding that rural communities
in the U.S. could also benefit from the technology.
He continued: "Emergency room physicians will have
technology that can be remotely accessible to surgeons, maybe even in the
ambulance, where people can get remote interventions if they can't make it to
the hospital.”
Patel said he will submit the data he collected from the
surgery to the FDA with the hopes that he can do more telesurgeries in the
future.
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