1College of Medicine and.
2Department of Surgery, University of Connecticut School of Medicine, Farmington.
J Neurosurg Pediatr. 2021 Apr 9;27(6):716-724. doi: 10.3171/2020.9.PEDS20518. Print 2021 Jun 1.
Neurosurgical residents receive exposure to the subspecialty of pediatric neurosurgery during training. The authors sought to determine resident operative experience in pediatric neurosurgery across Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME)-accredited neurosurgical programs.
During 2018-2019, pediatric neurosurgical case logs for recent graduates or current residents who completed their primary pediatric exposure were collected from US continental ACGME training programs. Using individual resident reports and procedure designations, operative volumes and case diversity were analyzed collectively, according to training site characteristics, and also correlated with the recently described Resident Experience Score (RES).
Of the 114 programs, a total of 316 resident case logs (range 1-19 residents per program) were received from 86 (75%) programs. The median cumulative pediatric case volume per resident was 109 (IQR 75-161). Residents at programs with a pediatric fellowship reported a higher median case volume (143, IQR 96-187) than residents at programs without (91, IQR 66-129; p < 0.0001). Residents at programs that outsource their pediatric rotation had a lower median case volume (84, IQR 52-114) compared with those at programs with an in-house experience (117, IQR 79-170; p < 0.0001). The case diversity index among all programs ranged from 0.61 to 0.80, with no statistically significant differences according to the Accreditation Council for Pediatric Neurosurgery Fellowships designation or pediatric experience site (p > 0.05). The RES correlated moderately (r = 0.44) with median operative volumes per program. A program's annual pediatric operative volume and duration of pediatric experience were identified as significant predictive factors for median resident operative volume.
Resident experience in pediatric neurosurgery is variable within and between programs. Case volumes are generally higher for residents at programs with in-house exposure and an accredited fellowship, but case diversity is relatively uniform across all programs. RES provides some insight on anticipated case volume, but other unexplained factors remain.
神经外科住院医师在培训期间接触小儿神经外科亚专业。作者旨在确定美国研究生医学教育认证委员会(ACGME)认证的神经外科项目中住院医师在小儿神经外科方面的手术经验。
在 2018-2019 年期间,从美国大陆 ACGME 培训项目中收集了最近毕业或正在接受主要儿科培训的住院医师的小儿神经外科病例日志。根据培训地点的特点,使用个别住院医师报告和手术指定,对手术量和病例多样性进行了集体分析,并与最近描述的住院医师经验评分(RES)进行了相关性分析。
在 114 个项目中,共收到 86 个(75%)项目的 316 名住院医师病例日志(每个项目 1-19 名住院医师)。每位住院医师的累积小儿病例量中位数为 109(IQR75-161)。有小儿神经外科奖学金项目的住院医师报告的中位数病例量(143,IQR96-187)高于没有奖学金项目的住院医师(91,IQR66-129;p<0.0001)。将小儿轮转外包的项目的住院医师中位数病例量(84,IQR52-114)低于内部轮转的项目(117,IQR79-170;p<0.0001)。所有项目的病例多样性指数范围为 0.61 至 0.80,根据小儿神经外科学会奖学金指定或小儿神经外科培训地点,没有统计学上的显著差异(p>0.05)。RES 与每个项目的中位手术量中度相关(r=0.44)。项目的年度小儿手术量和小儿经验的持续时间被确定为住院医师手术量中位数的显著预测因素。
住院医师在小儿神经外科方面的经验在项目内和项目间存在差异。有内部暴露和认证奖学金的项目的住院医师手术量通常较高,但所有项目的病例多样性相对一致。RES 提供了一些关于预期病例量的见解,但仍有其他未解释的因素。