AlZhrani Gmaan, Alotaibi Fahad, Azarnoush Hamed, Winkler-Schwartz Alexander, Sabbagh Abdulrahman, Bajunaid Khalid, Lajoie Susanne P, Del Maestro Rolando F
Neurosurgical Simulation Research Centre, Department of Neurosurgery, Montreal Neurological Institute and Hospital, McGill University, Montreal, Canada; National Neuroscience Institute, King Fahad Medical City, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.
Neurosurgical Simulation Research Centre, Department of Neurosurgery, Montreal Neurological Institute and Hospital, McGill University, Montreal, Canada; National Neuroscience Institute, King Fahad Medical City, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.
J Surg Educ. 2015 Jul-Aug;72(4):685-96. doi: 10.1016/j.jsurg.2014.12.014. Epub 2015 Feb 14.
Assessment of neurosurgical technical skills involved in the resection of cerebral tumors in operative environments is complex. Educators emphasize the need to develop and use objective and meaningful assessment tools that are reliable and valid for assessing trainees' progress in acquiring surgical skills. The purpose of this study was to develop proficiency performance benchmarks for a newly proposed set of objective measures (metrics) of neurosurgical technical skills performance during simulated brain tumor resection using a new virtual reality simulator (NeuroTouch).
Each participant performed the resection of 18 simulated brain tumors of different complexity using the NeuroTouch platform. Surgical performance was computed using Tier 1 and Tier 2 metrics derived from NeuroTouch simulator data consisting of (1) safety metrics, including (a) volume of surrounding simulated normal brain tissue removed, (b) sum of forces utilized, and (c) maximum force applied during tumor resection; (2) quality of operation metric, which involved the percentage of tumor removed; and (3) efficiency metrics, including (a) instrument total tip path lengths and (b) frequency of pedal activation.
All studies were conducted in the Neurosurgical Simulation Research Centre, Montreal Neurological Institute and Hospital, McGill University, Montreal, Canada.
A total of 33 participants were recruited, including 17 experts (board-certified neurosurgeons) and 16 novices (7 senior and 9 junior neurosurgery residents).
The results demonstrated that "expert" neurosurgeons resected less surrounding simulated normal brain tissue and less tumor tissue than residents. These data are consistent with the concept that "experts" focused more on safety of the surgical procedure compared with novices. By analyzing experts' neurosurgical technical skills performance on these different metrics, we were able to establish benchmarks for goal proficiency performance training of neurosurgery residents.
This study furthers our understanding of expert neurosurgical performance during the resection of simulated virtual reality tumors and provides neurosurgical trainees with predefined proficiency performance benchmarks designed to maximize the learning of specific surgical technical skills.
在手术环境中评估脑肿瘤切除所涉及的神经外科技术技能是复杂的。教育工作者强调需要开发和使用客观且有意义的评估工具,这些工具对于评估学员在获取手术技能方面的进展应是可靠且有效的。本研究的目的是为使用新型虚拟现实模拟器(NeuroTouch)进行模拟脑肿瘤切除过程中神经外科技术技能表现的一组新提出的客观测量指标(度量标准)制定熟练程度表现基准。
每位参与者使用NeuroTouch平台对18个不同复杂程度的模拟脑肿瘤进行切除。手术表现通过从NeuroTouch模拟器数据得出的一级和二级指标进行计算,这些数据包括:(1)安全指标,包括(a)切除的周围模拟正常脑组织体积,(b)所使用的力的总和,以及(c)肿瘤切除过程中施加的最大力;(2)手术质量指标,涉及切除的肿瘤百分比;以及(3)效率指标,包括(a)器械总尖端路径长度和(b)踏板激活频率。
所有研究均在加拿大蒙特利尔麦吉尔大学蒙特利尔神经病学研究所和医院的神经外科模拟研究中心进行。
共招募了33名参与者,包括17名专家(获得委员会认证的神经外科医生)和16名新手(7名高级和9名初级神经外科住院医师)。
结果表明,与住院医师相比,“专家”神经外科医生切除的周围模拟正常脑组织和肿瘤组织更少。这些数据与“专家”比新手更关注手术安全性的概念一致。通过分析专家在这些不同指标上的神经外科技术技能表现,我们能够为神经外科住院医师的目标熟练程度表现训练建立基准。
本研究进一步加深了我们对虚拟现实模拟肿瘤切除过程中专家神经外科表现的理解,并为神经外科受训人员提供了预定义的熟练程度表现基准,旨在最大限度地提高特定手术技术技能的学习效果。