Pretest and posttest evaluation of a longitudinal, residency-integrated microsurgery course Journal Article


Authors: Chacon, M. A.; Myers, P. L.; Patel, A. U.; Mitchell, D. C.; Langstein, H. N.; Leckenby, J. I.
Article Title: Pretest and posttest evaluation of a longitudinal, residency-integrated microsurgery course
Abstract: INTRODUCTION: Current microsurgical training courses average 5 consecutive 8-hour days and cost US $1500 to US $2500/individual, making training a challenge for residents who are unable to take leave from clinical duties. This residency-integrated microsurgery course was designed for integration with a residency program, averaging 3 hours/week over 7 weeks. This allows for one-on-one training, beginning with synthetic tissue and concluding with in vivo stimulation. This study was performed to validate this longitudinal training course. METHODS: After recruitment and before the start of coursework, subjects completed a baseline anastomosis without guidance and a survey regarding microsurgical experience. Subjects completed approximately 3 hours/week of practical exercises. Weeks 1 to 5 used synthetic models, whereas 6 to 7 used in vivo rodent models. Nine minimum anastomoses of increasing complexity were completed and assessed with the Anastomosis Lapse Index and the Stanford Microsurgery and Residency Training scale. Scoring was performed by 3 independent reviewers and averaged for comparison. RESULTS: Five subjects completed the course for study. Presurvey results showed an average confidence in theoretical knowledge of 2/5; technical ability to perform procedures, 1.8/5; and ability to manage complications, 1.8/5. Postsurvey revealed confidence in theoretical knowledge of 2.5/5; technical ability to perform procedures, 2.25/5; and ability to manage complications, 2.25/5. None of these differences were significant. Each individual component of the Stanford Microsurgery and Residency Training scale scoring system improved postcourse with P < 0.05, and overall performance score improved from an average of 2.6 to 3.9 (P = 0.006). The total number of errors recorded using the Anastomosis Lapse Index reduced from 6.58 to 3.41 (P = 0.02). Time to completion reduced from an average of 28 minutes, 8 seconds to 24 minutes, 5 seconds (P = 0.003). CONCLUSIONS: Despite a lack in significant confidence improvement, completion of the residency-integrated microsurgery course leads to significant and quantifiable improvement in resident microsurgical skill and efficiency.
Journal Title: Annals of Plastic Surgery
Volume: 85
Issue: Suppl. 1
ISSN: 0148-7043
Publisher: Lippincott Williams & Wilkins  
Date Published: 2020-07-01
Start Page: S122
End Page: S126
Language: English
DOI: 10.1097/sap.0000000000002322
PUBMED: 32205492
PROVIDER: scopus
DOI/URL:
Notes: Article -- Export Date: 1 July 2020 -- Source: Scopus
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  1. Paige L. Myers
    7 Myers