1 / 19

Sroka G , Feldman LS, Vassiliou MC, Kaneva P, Fayez R, Fried GM Steinberg- Bernstein Centre for Minimally Invasive Surg

FLS Simulator Training to Proficiency Improves Laparoscopic Performance in the Operating Room – a Randomized Controlled Trial. Sroka G , Feldman LS, Vassiliou MC, Kaneva P, Fayez R, Fried GM Steinberg- Bernstein Centre for Minimally Invasive Surgery & Innovation

theoris
Download Presentation

Sroka G , Feldman LS, Vassiliou MC, Kaneva P, Fayez R, Fried GM Steinberg- Bernstein Centre for Minimally Invasive Surg

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. FLS Simulator Training to Proficiency Improves Laparoscopic Performance in the Operating Room – a Randomized Controlled Trial Sroka G, Feldman LS, Vassiliou MC, Kaneva P, Fayez R, Fried GM Steinberg- Bernstein Centre for Minimally Invasive Surgery & Innovation McGill University, Montreal, Canada

  2. Disclosure • This study was funded by an educational grant from the Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada and an unrestricted educational grant from Covidien Canada. • Dr Sroka received fellowship funding from Covidien Canada and the American Physician Fellowship.

  3. Background • Teaching laparoscopy in the OR is inefficient and frustrating for the student and the teacher. • There is growing interest in the use of simulation for surgical skills training. • No consensus regarding: • type of simulator/ tasks • method of training • skills transferability

  4. Previous Work There is evidence for transferability of skills acquired in the simulator to OR performance in laparoscopic cholecystectomy. A Systematic Review of Skills Transfer After Surgical Simulation Training. Sturm LP et al. Ann Surg 248;2.Aug 2008 Limitations of previous work: • Simulator Tasks - not validated or modified • OR Performance - Large variations in assessment methods: • not validated • not specific for Laparoscopy.

  5. Objectives • To assess whether training to a proficiency level on the FLS simulator improves operating room laparoscopic performance in junior surgical residents.

  6. Study Design • Junior Surgical Residents (PGY 1-3) • Baseline Evaluations: • Simulator Performance (FLS) • OR Performance (GOALS) • Randomization (1:1) to Training or Control • Final Evaluations: • Simulator Performance (FLS) • OR Performance (GOALS)

  7. The 5 FLS Tasks Proving the Value of Simulation in Laparoscopic Surgery GM Fried, LS Feldman et al, Annals of Surgery 240 (3) 2004.

  8. Assessment of OR Performance - GOALS • Dissection of Gallbladder from liver bed. • Scoring: 1 (worst) to 5 (best) for each domain, Max score 25 • Valid, reliable, generalizable A global assessment tool for evaluation of intraoperative laparoscopic skills M Vassiliou, Feldman LS et al;The American Journal of Surgery 190 (2005)

  9. G O A L S S c o r e FLS Score 2 5 ( G B D i s s e c t i o n f r o m l i v e r b e d ) 100 2 0 80 1 5 60 1 0 40 5 20 0 0 PGY 1-2 PGY 3-4 PGY 5+ P G Y 1 - 2 P G Y 3 - 4 P G Y 5 + Measuring performance Simulator Operating Room From: Database (76 residents); Mean (95%CI); p<0.001

  10. Simulator Training • Design of a Proficiency-Based Skills Training Curriculum for the Fundamentals of Laparoscopic Surgery EM Ritter & DJ Scott . Surgical Innovation / Vol. 14, No. 2, June 2007

  11. Sample size calculation • Outcome Measure - GOALS Score • Meaningful Difference of 5 (SD = 3) in GOALS (between junior & intermediate) • Power - 80% ; =0.05 • N=7 per group

  12. Junior Residents N=19 Baseline Evaluations: Simulator - FLS OR - GOALS 2 excluded GOALS > 15 N=17, Randomization 1:1 Training Group Control Group N=9 N=8 Regular Residency + Regular Residency FLS Simulator Proficiency Training alone Based Trai ning 1 lost to follow up Final Evaluations: N=16 Simulator - FLS OR - GOALS Results: Flow of participants through the study

  13. Simulator Training N=8 No Simulator Training N=8 P value PGY 1 / 2 / 3 5 / 2 / 1 6 / 2 / 0 0.58 Age 27 (26.5-28.5) 27 (27-28) 0.85 Gender (M/F) 6 / 2 3 / 5 0.13 Time between evaluations (days) 162 (100-256) 113 (40-167) 0.13 GB Primary 4.5 (3-7) 3.5 (2-5) 0.21 GB Assistant 4.5 (3.5-8) 4.5 (4-6) 0.92 Other Lap 2.5 (1-3.5) 2.5 (2-3.5) 0.75 Group Characteristics Median (IQR)

  14. FLS Score 120 100 95.1 80 60.5 60 49.1 40 39.5 20 Training Non Training 0 Baseline Final Results - Simulator p<0.0001 p=0.004 p=0.002 mean±SD; Student’s t test

  15. GOALS Score 25 20 17.4 15 13.8 12.0 10 11.3 5 Training Non Training 0 Baseline Final Results - OR Performance p=0.0001 p=0.0005 p=0.04 mean±SD; Student’s t test

  16. GOALS difference 8 7 6.1 6 5 4 3 1.8 2 1 0 -1 Control Training Improvement in OR Performance p=0.0003 mean±SD; Student’s t test

  17. In summary • Residents who trained to proficiency on the FLS simulator improved their OR performance significantly more than controls • The magnitude of the improvement - from a junior to intermediate level resident (2 years!) • Achieved by only 7.5 hours of Simulator Training (1/3 supervised)

  18. Conclusions • The results demonstrate skill transfer from simulator to OR. • FLS is an extremely efficient way to acquire technical skills for junior residents • FLS should become part of the curriculum.

  19. Thank you!

More Related