School of Mechanical EngineeringUniversity of Leeds Leeds LS2 9JT U.K.
Pd-m International Thirsk YO7 1DA U.K.
IEEE J Transl Eng Health Med. 2022 May 23;10:3700212. doi: 10.1109/JTEHM.2022.3177313. eCollection 2022.
Over 5 billion people worldwide have no access to surgery worldwide, typically in low-resource settings, despite it being a primary life-saving treatment. Gas Insufflation-Less Laparoscopic Surgery (GILLS) can address this inequity, by improving current GILLS instrumentation to modern surgical standards.
to develop and translate a new Retractor for Abdominal Insufflation-less Surgery (RAIS) into clinical use and thus provide a context-appropriate system to advance GILLS surgery.
A collaborative multidisciplinary team from the UK and India was formed, embedding local clinical stakeholders and an industry partner in defining user and contextual needs. System development was based on a phased roadmap for 'surgical device design in low resource settings' and embedded participatory and frugal design principles in an iterative process supported by traditional medical device design methodologies. Each phase of development was evaluated by the stakeholder team through interactive workshops using cadaveric surgical simulations. A Commercialisation phase undertook Design to Manufacture and regulatory approval activities. Clinical validation was then conducted with rural surgeons performing GILLS procedures using the RAIS system. Semi-structured questionnaires and interviews were used to evaluate device performance.
A set of user needs and contextual requirements were defined and formalised. System development occurred across five iterations. Stakeholder participation was instrumental in converging on a design which met user requirements. A commercial RAIS system was then produced by an industry partner under Indian regulatory approval. This was successfully used in clinical validation to conduct 12 surgical procedures at two locations in rural India. Surgical feedback showed that the RAIS system provided a valuable and usable surgical instrument which was appropriate for use in low-resource contexts.
Using a context-specific development approach with close engagement of stakeholders was crucial to develop the RAIS system for low-resource regions. The outcome is translation from global health need into a fully realized commercial instrument which can be used by surgeons in low-resource regions across India.
全球有超过 50 亿人无法获得手术,通常是在资源匮乏的环境中,尽管手术是一种主要的救生治疗方法。无气腹腹腔镜手术(GILLS)可以通过改进当前的 GILLS 器械,使其达到现代手术标准,从而解决这种不平等现象。
将一种新的用于无气腹腹部手术的牵开器(RAIS)开发并翻译为临床应用,从而为推进 GILLS 手术提供一个适合当地情况的系统。
来自英国和印度的一个多学科合作团队成立,将当地的临床利益相关者和行业合作伙伴纳入其中,以确定用户和环境需求。系统开发基于“在资源匮乏环境中进行手术器械设计”的阶段性路线图,并在迭代过程中嵌入参与式和节俭式设计原则,同时辅以传统医疗器械设计方法。每个开发阶段都由利益相关者团队通过使用尸体手术模拟的互动研讨会进行评估。商业化阶段进行设计到制造和监管批准活动。然后,由农村外科医生使用 RAIS 系统进行 GILLS 手术,对临床验证进行评估。使用半结构化问卷和访谈来评估设备性能。
定义并正式确定了一套用户需求和环境要求。系统开发经过了五个迭代。利益相关者的参与对于达成满足用户需求的设计至关重要。然后,行业合作伙伴根据印度监管批准生产了一种商业 RAIS 系统。该系统在印度农村的两个地点成功地进行了 12 例手术的临床验证。手术反馈表明,RAIS 系统提供了一种有价值且可用的手术器械,非常适合在资源匮乏的环境中使用。
使用具有利益相关者密切参与的特定环境的开发方法对于开发适用于资源匮乏地区的 RAIS 系统至关重要。其结果是,将全球健康需求转化为一种完全实现的商业仪器,可以由印度各地资源匮乏地区的外科医生使用。