ROApr 20, 2021

Accelerating Surgical Robotics Research: A Review of 10 Years With the da Vinci Research Kit

arXiv:2104.09869v58 citations
Originality Synthesis-oriented
AI Analysis

This work supports the surgical robotics research community by enabling access to a key platform, but it is incremental as a review paper.

The paper reviews the impact of the da Vinci Research Kit (dVRK) over 10 years, showing it has facilitated numerous publications and addressed barriers to entry for surgical robotics research, though no specific numbers are provided for publications or growth metrics.

Robotic-assisted surgery is now well-established in clinical practice and has become the gold standard clinical treatment option for several clinical indications. The field of robotic-assisted surgery is expected to grow substantially in the next decade with a range of new robotic devices emerging to address unmet clinical needs across different specialities. A vibrant surgical robotics research community is pivotal for conceptualizing such new systems as well as for developing and training the engineers and scientists to translate them into practice. The da Vinci Research Kit (dVRK), an academic and industry collaborative effort to re-purpose decommissioned da Vinci surgical systems (Intuitive Surgical Inc, CA, USA) as a research platform for surgical robotics research, has been a key initiative for addressing a barrier to entry for new research groups in surgical robotics. In this paper, we present an extensive review of the publications that have been facilitated by the dVRK over the past decade. We classify research efforts into different categories and outline some of the major challenges and needs for the robotics community to maintain this initiative and build upon it.

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