Prognia
Back to Articles
OncologyRandomised Trial

Robotic versus Open Pancreatoduodenectomy (PORTAL): multicentre, single masked, phase 3, non-inferiority randomised controlled trial.

2 July 2026·3 min read·BMJ (Clinical research ed.)

Abstract / Summary

To determine whether robotic pancreatoduodenectomy (RPD) is non-inferior to open pancreatoduodenectomy (OPD) in terms of postoperative functional recovery, without compromising safety or oncological quality. Multicentre, single masked, phase 3, non-inferiority randomised controlled trial. Seven tertiary high volume pancreatic centres in China, 15 June 2020 to 28 November 2024. 268 adults with resectable pancreatic or periampullary disease. Participants were randomised to receive standardised RPD (n=142) or OPD (n=126), with enhanced recovery pathways. The primary outcome was time from surgery to postoperative functional recovery, defined as adequate pain control without parenteral analgesia, ≥50% oral intake without intravenous fluids, independent mobilisation, and absence of active intra-abdominal infection. The restricted mean event time (RMET) within 40 days was a summary for time from surgery to postoperative functional recovery. Secondary outcomes included operative metrics, disease related outcomes, length of stay, postoperative morbidity, including complications of Clavien-Dindo grade II or higher (defined as complications requiring drug treatment or more intensive intervention), and hospital admission costs. Overall, 254 of 268 randomly assigned participants (mean age 62 years; 172 (64.2%) men) underwent surgery, completed follow-up, and were included in the modified intention-to-treat population; 14 did not undergo surgery. In the modified intention-to-treat population, the RMET was 12.1 days (95% confidence interval (CI) 11.2 to 13.1) in the RPD group and 16.0 days (14.5 to 17.5) in the OPD group (difference -3.9 days, 95% CI -5.6 to -2.2; P<0.001). Operative time was longer in the RPD group (300 minutes (interquartile range (IQR) 240-360 minutes) versus 270 (210-300) minutes in the OPD group, P<0.001) but postoperative length of stay was shorter in the RPD group (13 (IQR 11-16) days v 16 (13-20) days, P<0.001). Overall postoperative morbidity was 31.1% (41/132) in the RPD group versus 36.1% (44/122) in the OPD group and incidence of any complications of Clavien-Dindo grade II or higher was 23.5% (31/132) versus 34.4% (42/122), respectively. 90 day mortality was 0.8% (1) in the RPD group and 2.5% (3) in the OPD group. Median total costs of hospital admission (including readmission cost) were higher in the RPD group than in the OPD group (¥130 905 (£14 369; $19 351; €16 628) (IQR ¥114 853-¥152 547) v ¥108 071 (¥92 134-¥128 035), difference ¥22 834 (95% CI ¥16 744 to ¥30 522); P<0.001). In high volume centres with credentialled surgeons, RPD met the non-inferiority margin for time from surgery to postoperative functional recovery, with comparable disease related outcomes and overall burden from postoperative complications. To generate wider system level efficiency gains, the implementation of RPD should take account of institutional expertise, procedural volume, acquisition of robotic surgical platforms and maintenance costs, and the potential for shorter hospital stay. ClinicalTrials.gov NCT04400357.

Primary Source

BMJ (Clinical research ed.)

View Source

Ask Prognia AI

Have questions about this randomised trial?

Prognia AI can search this source alongside 35M+ PubMed papers and current ESC, AHA, NICE, and ADA guidelines to give you a fully cited clinical answer.

Related Clinical Guidelines