Humanoid Robots as First Assistants in Endoscopic Surgery
Sue Min Cho, Jan Emily Mangulabnan, Han Zhang, Zhekai Mao, Yufan He, Pengfei Guo, Daguang Xu, Gregory Hager, Masaru Ishii, Mathias Unberath
- Year
- 2026
- Access
- Open access
Abstract
Humanoid robots have become a focal point of technological ambition, with claims of surgical capability within years in mainstream discourse. These projections are aspirational yet lack empirical grounding. To date, no humanoid has assisted a surgeon through an actual procedure, let alone performed one. The work described here breaks this new ground. Here we report a proof of concept in which a teleoperated Unitree G1 provided endoscopic visualization while an attending otolaryngologist performed a cadaveric sphenoidectomy. The procedure was completed successfully, with stable visualization maintained throughout. Teleoperation allowed assessment of whether the humanoid form factor could meet the physical demands of surgical assistance in terms of sustenance and precision; the cognitive demands were satisfied -- for now -- by the operator. Post-procedure analysis identified engineering targets for clinical translation, alongside near-term opportunities such as autonomous diagnostic scoping. This work establishes form-factor feasibility for humanoid surgical assistance while identifying challenges for continued development.
Keywords
Related papers
Campbell-Walsh urology
Alan J. Wein editor-in-chief
2012
Principles of Robot Motion: Theory, Algorithms, and Implementations
Howie Choset, Jean‐Claude Latombe
2005
Minimally Invasive versus Abdominal Radical Hysterectomy for Cervical Cancer
Pedro T. Ramírez, Michael Frumovitz, René Pareja +16 more
2018
Guideline for Management of the Clinical T1 Renal Mass
Steven C. Campbell, Andrew C. Novick, Arie S. Belldegrun +9 more
2009