Colorectal Disease Clinical Trial
Official title:
Creating and Implementing a Proficiency-Based Progression Virtual Reality Training Programme for Higher Surgical Trainees for Laparoscopic Assisted Sigmoid Colectomy.
Laparoscopic Colectomy is an advanced minimally invasive procedure that requires advanced
laparoscopic skills.
Minimally invasive surgery offers many advantages to the patients but exposes the surgeon to
new challenges, many of which are human factor in nature. This in turn prolongs the learning
curve and has delayed the widespread adoption of minimally invasive surgical techniques in
the management of patients with colorectal disease.
Virtual reality simulation offers an effective way of training whereby surgical trainees can
train repeatedly and achieve proficiency in a shorter time and a safe environment.
Introduction:
Minimally Invasive Surgery (MIS) has conferred considerable advantages on patient's post
operative outcome and recovery when compared with open surgery.
Major clinical trials including; Clinical Outcomes of Surgical Therapy Study Group (COSTSG),
Colon Cancer Laparoscopic or Open Resection (COLOR), and Conventional vs.
Laparoscopic-Assisted Surgery in Colorectal Cancer (CLASICC) have uniformly and consistently
shown a significant reduction in the post operative pain, the use of narcotics and oral
analgesics, and length of hospital stay, as well as a faster resumption of diet, return of
bowel function when using a MIS approach.
Despite all these advantages to the patients, MIS imposed a significant difficulty on the
surgeons. These difficulties were primarily human factor in nature.
The use of Virtual Reality (VR) simulation has been proven to help in the acquisition of MIS
skills. The use of proficiency-based, virtual reality simulation should help training of MIS
providers in a safe environment where complex tasks can be repeated as many times as needed
to achieve a pre-set proficiency level. A well designed proficiency-based simulation
curriculum should help the widespread use of the MIS approach.
Aims
Primary:
We aim to prove that subjects randomised to train under a proficiency-based progression
simulation curriculum (SC) will learn to perform laparoscopic assisted colectomy faster,
complete more surgical steps and commit fewer operative errors compared to subjects
randomised to the current surgical training curriculum (CC)
Secondary:
We aim to set the institutional and national proficiency level for Laparoscopic Assisted
Colectomy (LAC) using the ProMIS-LAC simulator from Haptica, Ireland.
Methods Randomised, controlled, single blinded, multicentre study. Primary Variable 8
centres, 8 co-investigators (expert consultant laparoscopic colorectal surgeons > 300 MIS
procedures) and 16 surgical trainees will be recruited for the study. Subjects (surgical
trainees) will be randomised into;
- Simulator Curriculum (SC) group.
- Conventional Curriculum (CC) group.
Subjects randomised to the CC group will continue to have the conventional training
programme offered at their respective hospitals. Subjects randomised to the SC group will
complete a standardised laparoscopic skills training course followed by a training
curriculum including the performance of simulated LAC procedures in nine predetermined steps
on the simulator. Subjects must reach a predetermined proficiency level to complete the
simulation training course before re-joining their training programme offered at their
respective hospitals. .
Upon completion of the training courses, both groups' subject populations will perform a
total of five LAC procedures on consecutive patients in the presence of a surgeon proctor.
Patients indicated for LAC procedure will be screened, consented, and enrolled as patients
into this study. Each procedure will be recorded and forwarded to the chief investigator for
analysis. The number of completed surgical steps and the incidence of intraoperative errors
between the two SC and CC groups will be evaluated via blinded video review.
Secondary Variable
All participating co-investigators will participate in defining the proficiency level for
LAC on the ProMIS-LAC simulator.
The average values of the recorded metrics which are obtained from the expert performance
will be used to set the proficiency level.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Single Blind (Outcomes Assessor)
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