Robotic-assisted surgery (RAS) is opening new frontiers for doctors — from improving precision and accuracy in spine surgery to increasing access and maneuverability in general surgery.1‑3

The shift to RAS for health systems requires a shared commitment by clinicians, hospital administrators, and medical technology innovators. We recognize that comprehensive RAS solutions combine the latest technology with flexible models across disease states — expanding based on evolving needs — and provide clinical and training support.

Innovation is ongoing. In 2021, our soft-tissue robotic-assisted surgery system received Conformité Européenne (CE) Mark approval in Europe, and later it received Health Canada license, in both cases for urologic and gynecologic procedures.

Learn more about how RAS can help standardize surgical procedures and enable minimally invasive surgery.





  1. Hussain A, Malik A, Halim MU, Ali AM. The use of robotics in surgery: a review. Int J Clin Pract. 2014;68:1376-1382.
  2. Albani JM. The role of robotics in surgery: a review. Mo Med. 2007;104:166-172.
  3. Hyun SJ, Kim KJ, Jahng TA, Kim HJ. Minimally invasive robotic versus open fluoroscopic-guided spinal instrumented fusions: a randomized controlled trial. Spine (Phila Pa 1976). 2017;42(6):353–358.

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