Kim Jin-Sung, Yeung Anthony, Lokanath Yadhu K, Lewandrowski Kai-Uwe
Spine Center, Department of Neurosurgery, Seoul St. Mary's Hospital, College of Medicine, The Catholic University of Korea, Seoul, Korea.
Interdisciplinary Center for Spine Health, University of New Mexico School of Medicine, Albuquerque, NM, USA.
J Spine Surg. 2020 Jan;6(Suppl 1):S224-S236. doi: 10.21037/jss.2019.12.13.
The purpose of this study was to analyze the training in relation to practice patterns of surgeons in Asia who perform lumbar endoscopic spinal surgery in comparison to surgeons the world over. The authors solicited responses to an online survey sent to spine surgeons.
Pearson Chi-Square measures, Kappa statistics, and linear regression analysis of agreement or disagreement were performed by analyzing the distribution of variances of responses in relation to surgeons' training using statistical package SPSS Version 25.0.
A total of 430 surgeons accessed the survey. The completion rate was 67.4%. Analyzing the responses of 292 surveys submitted by 97 neurosurgeons (33.2%), 161 orthopaedic surgeons (55.1%), and 34 surgeons of other postgraduate training (11.6%) showed that only 14.0% (41/292) of surgeons had completed a fellowship. Ninety-one of the 292 respondents were from Asian countries/regions. A statistically significantly higher percentage of Asian surgeons (96.7%) compared to non-Asian surgeons (81.6%) indicated that they perform modern minimally invasive (MIS) and endoscopic spinal (ES) surgery (P=0.001). Spinal endoscopy was employed by 70.3% of Asian versus 55.2% of non-Asian surgeons (P=0.015). Endoscopic decompression techniques requiring advanced training was employed nearly twice as high by the Asian surgeons than by non-Asian.
Training requirements for MIS and ES surgery and implementation of privileges vary in different parts of the world. While industry-sponsored weekend cadaver workshops have remained the mainstay of training aspiring endoscopic spinal surgeons in North America and Europe leaving many of them to become autodidacts.
本研究旨在分析亚洲进行腰椎内镜脊柱手术的外科医生与全球其他外科医生相比的培训情况及实践模式。作者向脊柱外科医生发送了在线调查问卷以征集反馈。
使用统计软件SPSS 25.0,通过分析与外科医生培训相关的回复方差分布,进行Pearson卡方检验、Kappa统计以及一致性或不一致性的线性回归分析。
共有430名外科医生访问了该调查问卷。完成率为67.4%。分析97名神经外科医生(33.2%)、161名骨科医生(55.1%)和34名其他研究生培训背景的外科医生(11.6%)提交的292份调查问卷的回复显示,只有14.0%(41/292)的外科医生完成了进修。292名受访者中有91名来自亚洲国家/地区。与非亚洲外科医生(81.6%)相比,亚洲外科医生中表示进行现代微创(MIS)和内镜脊柱(ES)手术的比例在统计学上显著更高(96.7%,P = 0.001)。70.3%的亚洲外科医生采用脊柱内镜,而非亚洲外科医生的这一比例为55.2%(P = 0.015)。亚洲外科医生采用需要高级培训的内镜减压技术的比例几乎是非亚洲外科医生的两倍。
世界不同地区对MIS和ES手术的培训要求以及权限的实施情况各不相同。在北美和欧洲,由行业赞助的周末尸体研讨班一直是培训有抱负的内镜脊柱外科医生的主要方式,这使得他们中的许多人只能自学成才。