Journal
SURGICAL ENDOSCOPY AND OTHER INTERVENTIONAL TECHNIQUES
Volume 37, Issue 6, Pages 4623-4626Publisher
SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00464-023-09958-z
Keywords
Minimally invasive surgery; Laparoscopy; Fellowship
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This study aimed to investigate the differences in clinical experience of individual fellows in academic and community programs of minimally invasive surgery (MIS) fellowship. The results showed that there was no significant difference in the number of commonly performed cases between academic and community programs. However, community-based fellows had more case experience in less commonly performed case types.
Introduction Minimally invasive surgery (MIS) fellowship is one of the most popular fellowship programs, but little is known about the individual fellow's clinical experience. Our goal was to determine the differences in case volume and case type in academic and community programs.Methods A retrospective review of advanced gastrointestinal, MIS, foregut, or bariatric fellowship cases logged into the Fellowship Council directory of fellowships during the 2020 and 2021 academic years included for analysis. The final cohort included 57,324 cases from all fellowship programs, that list data on the Fellowship Council website, including 58 academic programs and 62 community-based programs. All comparisons between groups were completed using Student's t-test.Results The mean number of cases logged during a fellowship year was 477.7 +/- 149.9 with similar case numbers in academic and community programs, 462.5 +/- 115.0 and 491.9 +/- 176.2 respectively (p = 0.28). The mean data is illustrated in Fig. 1. The most common performed cases were in the following categories: bariatric surgery (149.8 +/- 86.9 cases), endoscopy (111.1 +/- 86.4 cases), hernia (68.0 +/- 57.7 cases) and foregut (62.8 +/- 37.3 cases). In these case-type categories, no significant differences in case volume were found between academic and community-based MIS fellowship programs. However, community-based programs had significantly more case experience compared to academic programs in all of the less commonly performed case-type categories: appendix 7.8 +/- 12.8 vs 4.6 +/- 5.1 cases (p = 0.08), colon 16.1 +/- 20.7 vs 6.8 +/- 11.7 cases (p = 0.003), hepato-pancreatic-biliary 46.9 +/- 50.8 vs 32.5 +/- 18.5 cases (p = 0.04), peritoneum 11.7 +/- 16.0 vs 7.0 +/- 7.6 cases (p = 0.04), and small bowel 11.9 +/- 9.6 vs 8.8 +/- 5.9 cases (p = 0.03).Conclusion MIS fellowship has been a well-established fellowship program under the Fellowship Council guideline. In our study, we aimed to identify the categories of fellowship training and the perspective case volumes in academic vs community setting. We conclude that fellowship training experience is similar in case volumes of commonly performed cases when comparing academic and community programs. However, there is substantial variability in the operative experience among MIS fellowship programs. Further study is necessary to identify the quality of fellowship training experience.
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