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The Balance between Open and Robotic Training among Graduating Urology Residents—Does Surgical Technique Need Monitoring?

Authors :
Suzanne B. Merrill
Brian S. Sohl
Adam C. Reese
Richard K. Lee
Jay D. Raman
Dipen J. Parekh
Thomas J. Guzzo
John H. Lynch
R. Houston Thompson
Stanley Zaslau
Daniel H. Williams
Erik Lehman
Baruch M. Grob
Patrick J. Shenot
Source :
Journal of Urology. 203:996-1002
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health), 2020.

Abstract

A minimum number of index procedures is required for graduation. Without thresholds for surgical technique, it is unclear if robotic and open learning is balanced. We assessed the distribution of robotic and open surgeries performed by residents upon graduation.Voluntary Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education resident case logs from 11 institutions were de-identified and trends in robotic and open major surgeries were compared using Wilcoxon rank sum and 2-sample t-tests.A total of 89,199 major cases were recorded by 209 graduates from 2011 to 2017. The median proportion of robotic cases increased from 2011 to 2017 in reconstruction (4.7% to 15.2%), oncology (27.5% to 54.2%) and pediatrics (0% to 10.9%) (all values p0.001). Robotic and open cases remained most divergent in reconstruction, with a median of 12 robotic (IQR 9-19) to 70 open cases (IQR 55-106) being performed by residents in 2017. Similar observations occurred in pediatrics. In oncology the number of robotic procedures superseded that of open in 2016 and rose to a median of 148 robotic (IQR 108-214) to 121 open cases (IQR 90-169) in 2017, with the driver being robotic prostatectomy. Substantial differences in surgical technique were observed between institutions and among graduates from the same institution.Although robotic volume is increasing, the balance of surgical technique and the pace of change differ in reconstruction, oncology and pediatrics, as well as among individual institutions and graduates themselves. This raises questions about whether more specific guidelines are needed to ensure equity and standardization in training.

Details

ISSN :
15273792 and 00225347
Volume :
203
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Urology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....a39f13743c2d04fa9fa4c08667335051