With the Hugo RAS (Robotic-Assisted Surgery) system, Bahrain’s Royal Medical Services (RMS) surpassed other Middle Eastern health providers by becoming the region’s first facility to achieve a milestone of more than 100 successful surgeries. This record-breaking feat not only makes Bahrain a trailblazer in surgical robotics but also heralds the beginning of a Gulf-wide trend toward high-precision, minimally invasive surgery.
The secret to such success is the Hugo RAS system—a module-based, mobile platform built “by surgeons, for surgeons” to serve in a variety of operating room applications. In contrast to monolithic robotic suites, Hugo can utilize up to four standalone arm carts that can be configured as one- to four-arm systems, with surgical teams tailoring each procedure to maximize access and efficiency. Its open-console configuration is designed for situational awareness, and the Touch Surgery digital platform provides real-time video capture and analytics to enable ongoing improvement in performance.
Bahrain’s experience with Hugo started in August 2024, when the RMS effectively utilized the function of the robot to remove cancerous tumors—its first such application in any Bahraini theater. Following this first operation, units in the BDF Hospital used the system in urology, gynecology, colorectal, and general surgery, yielding promising results with less blood loss, fewer complications, and faster recovery of the patients.
Clinical evidence substantiates these benefits: minimally invasive RAS procedures can shorten hospital stays by up to 30% and lower postoperative pain scores by nearly half versus traditional laparoscopy. Surgeons attribute Hugo’s six-joint arms and 3D high-definition visualization to translating into unparalleled dexterity and precision—even in tricky, multi-quadrant cases.
In the next few years, RMS will continue to build on its robotic program with additional specialized training modules and research partnerships. Pioneers have already started working on Hugo’s role in advanced simulations and AI-driven workflow optimization. By combining data-driven insights from Touch Surgeryâ„¢ and experience-driven knowledge, Bahraini surgeons will align best practice and bring RAS to the rural clinic and small hospital.
While the Hugo RAS system keeps pushing the boundaries of what is possible in the OR, Bahrain’s success gives us a preview of the future when robotics, data, and human potential come together to enhance patient care. With every operation, the RMS not only continues to build its surgical skills but also writes a new chapter in the Middle East’s history of medicine—one that is full of innovation, teamwork and relentless pursuit of excellence.