The Impact of Simulation-Based Trabeculectomy Training on Resident Core Surgical Skill Competency.
Roxanne Annoh, John Buchan, Stephen Gichuhi, Heiko Philippin, Simon Arunga, Agrippa Mukome, Fisseha Admassu, Karinya Lewis, William Makupa, Juliet Otiti-Sengeri, Min Kim, David MacLeod, Matthew J Burton, William H Dean
Summary
This study demonstrates the positive impact of intensive simulation-based surgical education on core trabeculectomy skill development.
Abstract
PRCIS
Simulation-based surgical education shows a positive, immediate, and sustained impact on core surgical skill competency in trabeculectomy among resident ophthalmologists in training.
PURPOSE
To measure the impact of trabeculectomy, surgical simulation training on core surgical skill competency in resident ophthalmologists.
MATERIALS AND METHODS
This is a post hoc analysis of the GLAucoma Simulated Surgery trial, which is a multicenter, multinational randomized controlled trial. Resident ophthalmologists from 6 training centers in sub-Saharan Africa (in Kenya, Uganda, Tanzania, Zimbabwe, and South Africa) were recruited according to the inclusion criteria of having performed zero surgical trabeculectomies and assisted in <5. Participants were randomly assigned to intervention and control arms using allocation concealment. The intervention was a 1-week intensive trabeculectomy surgical simulation course. Outcome measures were mean surgical competency scores in 8 key trabeculectomy surgical skills (scleral incision, scleral flap, releasable suturing, conjunctival suturing, sclerostomy, tissue handling, fluidity, and speed), using a validated scoring tool.
RESULTS
Forty-nine residents were included in the intention-to-treat analysis. Baseline characteristics were balanced between arms. Median baseline surgical competency scores were 2.88/16 [interquartile range (IQR): 1.75-4.17] and 3.25/16 (IQR: 1.83-4.75) in the intervention and control arms, respectively. At primary intervention, median scores increased to 11.67/16 (IQR: 9.58-12.63) and this effect was maintained at 3 months and 1 year ( P =0.0001). Maximum competency scores at primary intervention were achieved in the core trabeculectomy skills of releasable suturing (n=17, 74%), scleral flap formation (n=16, 70%), and scleral incision (n=15, 65%) compared with scores at baseline.
CONCLUSIONS
This study demonstrates the positive impact of intensive simulation-based surgical education on core trabeculectomy skill development. The rapid and sustained effect of resident skill acquisition pose strong arguments for its formal integration into ophthalmic surgical education.
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