Beyond task time: Automated measurement augments fundamentals of laparoscopic skills methodology

Timothy M. Kowalewski, Lee W. White, Thomas S. Lendvay, Iris S. Jiang, Robert Sweet, Andrew Wright, Blake Hannaford, Mika N. Sinanan

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

26 Scopus citations

Abstract

Background: Laparoscopic psychomotor skills are challenging to learn and objectively evaluate. The Fundamentals of Laparoscopic Skills (FLS)program provides apopular, inexpensive, widely-studied, and reported method for evaluating basic laparoscopic skills. With an emphasis on training safety before efficiency, we present data that explore themetrics in the FLS curriculum. Materials and methods: A multi-institutional (n = 3) cross-sectional study enrolled subjects (n = 98) of all laparoscopic skill levels to perform FLS tasks in an instrumented box trainer. Recorded task videos were postevaluatedby faculty reviewers (n = 2) blinded to subject identity using a modified Objective Structured Assessment of Technical Skills (OSATS) protocol. FLS scores were computed for each completed task and compared with demographically established skill levels (training level and number of procedures), video review scoring, and objective performance metrics including path length, economy of motion, and peak grasping force. Results: Three criteria used to determine expert skill, training and experience level, blinded review of performance by faculty via OSATS, and FLS scores, disagree in establishing concurrent validity for determining "true experts" in FLS tasks. FLS-scoring exhibited near perfect correlation with task time for all three tasks (Pearson r = 0.99, 1.00, 1.00 with P <0.00000001). FLS error penalties had negligible effect on FLS scores. Peak grasping force did not correlate with task time or FLS scores. Conclusions: FLS technical skills scores presented negligible benefit beyond the measurement of task time. FLS scoring is weighted more toward speed than precision and may not significantly address poor tissue handling skills, especially regarding excessive grasping force. Categories of experience or training level may not form a suitable basis for establishing proficiency thresholds or for construct validity studies for technical skills.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)329-338
Number of pages10
JournalJournal of Surgical Research
Volume192
Issue number2
DOIs
StatePublished - Dec 1 2014

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2014 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Keywords

  • Education
  • FLS
  • Grasping force
  • Laparoscopy
  • Objective metrics
  • Simulation
  • Validation

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