Virtual classroom proficiency-based progression for robotic surgery training (VROBOT): a randomised, prospective, cross-over, effectiveness study

被引:0
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作者
Arjun Nathan
Sonam Patel
Maria Georgi
Monty Fricker
Aqua Asif
Alexander Ng
William Mullins
Man Kien Hang
Alexander Light
Senthil Nathan
Nader Francis
John Kelly
Justin Collins
Ashwin Sridhar
机构
[1] University College London,Division of Surgery and Interventional Sciences
[2] Royal College of Surgeons of England,Department of Surgery and Cancer
[3] University College London Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust,undefined
[4] University College London Medical School,undefined
[5] Newcastle University,undefined
[6] St George’s University Hospital,undefined
[7] Imperial College London,undefined
来源
关键词
Robotic skills training; Virtual classroom; Proficiency-based progression; Surgical education;
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学科分类号
摘要
Robotic surgery training has lacked evidence-based standardisation. We aimed to determine the effectiveness of adjunctive interactive virtual classroom training (VCT) in concordance with the self-directed Fundamentals of Robotic Surgery (FRS) curriculum. The virtual classroom is comprised of a studio with multiple audio–visual inputs to which participants can connect remotely via the BARCO weConnect platform. Eleven novice surgical trainees were randomly allocated to two training groups (A and B). In week 1, both groups completed a robotic skills induction. In week 2, Group A received training with the FRS curriculum and adjunctive VCT; Group B only received access to the FRS curriculum. In week 3, the groups received the alternate intervention. The primary outcome was measured using the validated robotic-objective structured assessment of technical skills (R-OSAT) at the end of week 2 (time-point 1) and 3 (time-point 2). All participants completed the training curriculum and were included in the final analyses. At time-point 1, Group A achieved a statistically significant greater mean proficiency score compared to Group B (44.80 vs 35.33 points, p = 0.006). At time-point 2, there was no significant difference in mean proficiency score in Group A from time-point 1. In contrast, Group B, who received further adjunctive VCT showed significant improvement in mean proficiency by 9.67 points from time-point 1 (95% CI 5.18–14.15, p = 0.003). VCT is an effective, accessible training adjunct to self-directed robotic skills training. With the steep learning curve in robotic surgery training, VCT offers interactive, expert-led learning and can increase training effectiveness and accessibility.
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页码:629 / 635
页数:6
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