Division of Vascular and Endovascular Surgery, University of California, San Francisco, CA.
Division of Vascular Surgery and Endovascular Therapy, University of Colorado, Aurora, CO.
Ann Vasc Surg. 2022 Oct;86:68-76. doi: 10.1016/j.avsg.2022.05.022. Epub 2022 Jun 11.
With the evolution in vascular surgery toward increased endovascular therapy and decreased open surgical training, comfort with open procedures by current trainees is declining. A proposed method to improve this discomfort is simulator training. We hypothesized that open, cadaver, and endovascular surgery simulation would be associated with increased self-perceived comfort in performing corresponding procedures.
Integrated (0 + 5) vascular surgery residents and recent graduates in the United States were asked to complete a survey quantifying comfort via a Likert scale with procedures and experience with simulation training. Simulation groups were then matched using coarsened exact matching. Ordinal logistic regression assessed the association between simulation experience and comfort in performing procedures.
Surveys were completed by 68 trainees and 20 attending surgeons in their first 5 years of practice. On unmatched analyses, there were no significant differences in comfort in performing any open or endovascular aorto-mesenteric or peripheral vascular procedures between respondents who reported experience with open or endovascular simulation, respectively. However, respondents who reported cadaver simulation experience (58%, 51/88) had a significantly higher reported comfort score performing open juxtarenal aortic repair (2.4 vs. 1.7), superior mesenteric artery thrombectomy or bypass (2.5 vs. 1.9), inferior vena cava or iliac vein repair (2.2 vs. 1.7), axillary-femoral artery bypass (3.4 vs. 2.5), femoral-popliteal artery bypass (3.7 vs. 2.8), and inframalleolar artery bypass (2.8 vs. 2.1; all P < 0.05). After matching on training level, number of abdominal cases completed, and number of open vascular cases completed, ordinal logistic regression demonstrated that previous cadaver simulation was significantly associated with increased comfort in performing open aortic repairs, venous repair, visceral revascularization, and peripheral bypasses.
In this nationally representative sample, cadaver, but not open or endovascular, simulation was associated with increased comfort in performing open vascular surgery. Providing cadaver simulation to trainees may help to improve comfort levels in performing open surgery. Integrated vascular surgery training programs should consider implementing these experiences into their curriculum.
随着血管外科学向增加血管内治疗和减少开放手术培训的发展,当前受训者对开放手术的舒适度正在下降。一种提高这种不适的方法是模拟器培训。我们假设开放、尸体和血管内手术模拟将与执行相应手术的自我感知舒适度增加相关。
在美国,综合(0+5)血管外科住院医师和最近毕业的医生被要求通过李克特量表完成一项调查,量化通过程序和模拟培训经验的舒适度。然后使用粗化精确匹配来匹配模拟组。有序逻辑回归评估了模拟经验与执行程序的舒适度之间的关联。
共有 68 名受训者和 20 名参加实践的医生在实践的头 5 年内完成了调查。在未匹配的分析中,报告有开放或血管内模拟经验的受访者在执行任何开放或血管内腹主动脉-内脏或外周血管手术的舒适度方面没有显著差异。然而,报告有尸体模拟经验的受访者(58%,51/88)在执行开放肾下主动脉修复术时的报告舒适度评分明显更高(2.4 对 1.7),肠系膜上动脉血栓切除术或旁路术(2.5 对 1.9),下腔静脉或髂静脉修复术(2.2 对 1.7),腋股动脉旁路术(3.4 对 2.5),股腘动脉旁路术(3.7 对 2.8)和胫下动脉旁路术(2.8 对 2.1;所有 P<0.05)。在按培训水平、完成的腹部病例数和完成的开放血管病例数进行匹配后,有序逻辑回归表明,以前的尸体模拟与开放主动脉修复、静脉修复、内脏血运重建和外周旁路术的舒适度增加显著相关。
在这项具有全国代表性的样本中,尸体模拟,而不是开放或血管内模拟,与执行开放血管手术的舒适度增加相关。向受训者提供尸体模拟可能有助于提高执行开放手术的舒适度水平。综合血管外科学培训计划应考虑将这些经验纳入其课程。