Department of Surgery, Stanford University, Stanford, CA.
Ann Surg. 2022 Oct 1;276(4):701-710. doi: 10.1097/SLA.0000000000005595. Epub 2022 Jul 19.
Surgeon preferences such as instrument and suture selection and idiosyncratic approaches to individual procedure steps have been largely viewed as minor differences in the surgical workflow. We hypothesized that idiosyncratic approaches could be quantified and shown to have measurable effects on procedural outcomes.
At the American College of Surgeons (ACS) Clinical Congress, experienced surgeons volunteered to wear motion tracking sensors and be videotaped while evaluating a loop of porcine intestines to identify and repair 2 preconfigured, standardized enterotomies. Video annotation was used to identify individual surgeon preferences and motion data was used to quantify surgical actions. χ 2 analysis was used to determine whether surgical preferences were associated with procedure outcomes (bowel leak).
Surgeons' (N=255) preferences were categorized into 4 technical decisions. Three out of the 4 technical decisions (repaired injuries together, double-layer closure, corner-stitches vs no corner-stitches) played a significant role in outcomes, P <0.05. Running versus interrupted did not affect outcomes. Motion analysis revealed significant differences in average operative times (leak: 6.67 min vs no leak: 8.88 min, P =0.0004) and work effort (leak-path length=36.86 cm vs no leak-path length=49.99 cm, P =0.001). Surgeons who took the riskiest path but did not leak had better bimanual dexterity (leak=0.21/1.0 vs no leak=0.33/1.0, P =0.047) and placed more sutures during the repair (leak=4.69 sutures vs no leak=6.09 sutures, P =0.03).
Our results show that individual preferences affect technical decisions and play a significant role in procedural outcomes. Future analysis in more complex procedures may make major contributions to our understanding of contributors to procedure outcomes.
外科医生的偏好,如器械和缝线的选择以及对个别手术步骤的独特方法,在很大程度上被视为手术流程中的细微差异。我们假设可以对这些独特的方法进行量化,并证明它们对手术结果有可衡量的影响。
在美国外科医师学院(ACS)临床大会上,有经验的外科医生自愿佩戴运动跟踪传感器并被录像,同时评估一段猪肠以识别和修复 2 个预先配置的标准化肠切开术。使用视频注释来识别个别外科医生的偏好,使用运动数据来量化手术动作。使用卡方检验来确定手术偏好是否与手术结果(肠漏)相关。
外科医生(N=255)的偏好分为 4 项技术决策。4 项技术决策中的 3 项(一起修复损伤、双层闭合、角缝与无角缝)对结果有显著影响(P <0.05)。连续缝合与间断缝合并不影响结果。运动分析显示平均手术时间(漏:6.67 分钟与不漏:8.88 分钟,P=0.0004)和工作努力(漏路径长度=36.86 厘米与不漏路径长度=49.99 厘米,P=0.001)存在显著差异。采取风险最高路径但未漏的外科医生双手灵巧性更好(漏=0.21/1.0 与不漏=0.33/1.0,P=0.047),在修复过程中放置的缝线更多(漏=4.69 缝线与不漏=6.09 缝线,P=0.03)。
我们的结果表明,个人偏好会影响技术决策,并在手术结果中发挥重要作用。未来在更复杂的手术中进行分析,可能会对我们理解手术结果的影响因素做出重大贡献。