Shah Asad A, Aftab Muhammad, Tchantchaleishvili Vakhtang, LaPar Damien J, Stephens Elizabeth H, Walters Dustin M, DeNino Walter F, Odell David D, Robich Michael, Cevasco Marisa, Eilers Amanda L, Gillaspie Erin A, Goldstone Andrew, Malas Tarek, Rice Robert D, Shelstad Ryan C, Andersen Nicholas D
Division of Cardiovascular and Thoracic Surgery, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, North Carolina.
Department of Surgery, Cleveland Clinic, Cleveland, Ohio.
Ann Thorac Surg. 2016 Jun;101(6):2341-9. doi: 10.1016/j.athoracsur.2015.12.069. Epub 2016 Mar 26.
The present study aimed to describe and compare the operative experience of cardiothoracic surgical residents for basic and advanced cardiac surgical procedures.
Data were obtained from the 2015 Thoracic Surgery Directors Association Survey administered to all thoracic surgical residents taking the yearly In-Service Training Examination (n = 356). Residents were asked whether they routinely served as the operative surgeon on various cardiac operations and operative tasks. Results were stratified by postgraduate year (PGY), residency type, and primary career interest.
The survey response rate was 100%. Considering all training pathways, only 2 of 13 cardiac operations surveyed were routinely performed by graduating chief residents as the operative surgeon: coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG; 92%) and aortic valve replacement (AVR; 88%). Off-pump CABG, minimally invasive mitral valve operation, and transcatheter aortic interventions were infrequently (<30% of the time) performed by graduating residents as the operative surgeon. These results were similar when residents with a career interest in general thoracic surgery were excluded from the analysis. For the operative progression of integrated 6-year (I-6) residents, most began to routinely cannulate for cardiopulmonary bypass, perform proximal coronary anastomoses, and harvest the mammary artery during PGY3. The majority (>50%) of I-6 residents performed CABG as the operative surgeon by PGY4.
There is pronounced heterogeneity in the cardiac operative experience of cardiothoracic surgical residents in the United States, with only CABG and AVR routinely performed by graduating residents as the operative surgeon. This heterogeneity may lead to insufficient training in certain procedures for many graduates.
本研究旨在描述和比较心胸外科住院医师进行基础和高级心脏外科手术的操作经验。
数据来自2015年胸外科主任协会对所有参加年度在职培训考试的胸外科住院医师进行的调查(n = 356)。住院医师被问及他们是否经常作为手术医生参与各种心脏手术和操作任务。结果按研究生年级(PGY)、住院医师类型和主要职业兴趣进行分层。
调查回复率为100%。考虑所有培训途径,在接受调查的13种心脏手术中,只有2种手术在毕业时由总住院医师作为手术医生常规进行:冠状动脉旁路移植术(CABG;92%)和主动脉瓣置换术(AVR;88%)。非体外循环CABG、微创二尖瓣手术和经导管主动脉介入手术,毕业住院医师作为手术医生进行的频率较低(<30%的时间)。当将对普通胸外科有职业兴趣的住院医师排除在分析之外时,这些结果相似。对于6年制综合住院医师(I-6)的手术进展,大多数人在PGY3期间开始常规进行体外循环插管、近端冠状动脉吻合以及获取乳内动脉。大多数(>50%)的I-6住院医师在PGY4时作为手术医生进行CABG手术。
美国心胸外科住院医师的心脏手术经验存在明显异质性,毕业住院医师仅常规进行CABG和AVR手术。这种异质性可能导致许多毕业生在某些手术方面的培训不足。