Beyond the borders: Mumbai doctor performs remote robotic surgery on Oman woman- The Week
In a landmark achievement for global healthcare, Kokilaben Dhirubhai Ambani Hospital marked World Health Day 2026 (April 7) by performing India’s first-ever cross-border remote robotic surgery. A successful robotic kidney removal was performed on a 55-year-old patient in Muscat, Oman, diagnosed with cancer.
Dr T.B. Yuvaraja performed the surgery while the patient was stationed hundreds of miles away in India at Medical City Hospital in Muscat. The robotic radical nephrectomy was conducted using the cutting-edge Medbot Toumai Robotic Surgery System.
This milestone demonstrates a future where Indian surgical expertise transcends geographical boundaries, delivering real-time, life-saving care across continents.
How did the hospital achieve this rare feat?
Enabled by cutting-edge robotics and seamless real-time connectivity, the surgery was performed with exceptional control, proving the reliability of remote medical care. This breakthrough highlights the hospital’s commitment to future-ready infrastructure, providing the high-bandwidth, secure environment necessary to transcend geographical boundaries in modern medicine.
“It is a fundamental shift in how healthcare will be delivered globally. The ability to operate across borders in real time means that access to the best medical expertise is no longer defined by geography. This milestone goes beyond a successful procedure—it reflects how rapidly healthcare is evolving beyond physical boundaries,” said Dr T. B. Yuvaraja, Director (Group), Uro-Oncology and Robotic Surgery, Kokilaben Dhirubhai Ambani Hospitals.
Dr Santhosh Shetty, Executive Director & CEO, Kokilaben Dhirubhai Ambani Hospital, said that this development builds on the hospital’s technology leadership and earlier success in remote robotic procedures, further strengthening its position at the forefront of medical innovation.
“As healthcare systems globally look to address disparities in access and expertise, milestones like these signal a larger transformation—one where distance becomes irrelevant, access becomes universal, and India plays a leading role in shaping the future of global healthcare innovation,” added Dr Shetty.
This milestone signals a strategic shift: India is evolving from a medical tourism hub into a global provider of real-time expertise. At the heart of this shift is a patient-first approach. By exporting surgical skills instead of importing patients, Indian doctors can now bypass logistical barriers, reduce delays, and deliver specialised care globally in real time.
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