Publication | Open Access
Evaluation of the Learning Curve in Laparoscopic Colorectal Surgery
733
Citations
20
References
2005
Year
The study aims to analyze the learning curve of major laparoscopic colonic and rectal surgery, comparing right‑ versus left‑sided resections, using data from 900 patients at a single center. The authors evaluated operation time, conversion, readmission, and complication rates, using multifactorial logistic regression and a risk‑adjusted CUSUM model to assess learning curves for right‑ and left‑sided resections. They found that conversion rates were influenced by BMI, ASA grade, resection type, intra‑abdominal abscess or fistula, and surgeon experience, with learning curves of 55 cases for right‑sided and 62 for left‑sided resections, while operative time decreased with experience but readmission and complication rates remained unchanged, suggesting the model can monitor performance.
To provide a multidimensional analysis of the learning curve in major laparoscopic colonic and rectal surgery and compare outcomes between right-sided versus left-sided resections.The laparoscopic learning curve is known to vary between surgeons, may be influenced by the patient selection and operative complexity, and requires appropriate case-mix adjustment.This is a descriptive single-center study using routinely collected clinical data from 900 patients undergoing laparoscopic surgery between November 1991 and April 2003. Outcome measures included operation time, conversion rate (CR), and readmission and postoperative complication rates. Multifactorial logistic regression analysis was used to identify patient-, surgeon-, and procedure-related factors associated with conversion of laparoscopic to open surgery. A risk-adjusted Cumulative Sum (CUSUM) model was used for evaluating the learning curve for right and left-sided resections.The conversion rate for right-sided colonic resections was 8.1% (n = 457) compared with 15.3% for left-sided colorectal resections (n = 443). Independent predictors of conversion of laparoscopic to open surgery were the body mass index (BMI) (odds ratio [OR] = 1.07 per unit increase), ASA grade (OR = 1.63 per unit increase), type of resection (left colorectal versus right colonic procedures, OR = 1.5), presence of intra-abdominal abscess (OR = 5.0) or enteric fistula (OR = 4.6), and surgeon's experience (OR 0.9 per 10 additional cases performed). Having adjusted for case-mix, the CUSUM analysis demonstrated a learning curve of 55 cases for right-sided colonic resections versus 62 cases for left-sided resections. Median operative time declined with operative experience (P<0.001). Readmission rates and postoperative complications remained unchanged throughout the series and were not dependent on operative experience.Conversion rates for laparoscopic colectomy are dependent on a multitude of factors that require appropriate adjustment including the learning curve (operative experience) for individual surgeons. The laparoscopic model described can be used as the basis for performance monitoring between or within institutions.
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