Practicing on the Advanced Training in Laparoscopic Suturing Curriculum (ATLAS): Is Mastery Learning in Residency Feasible to Achieve Expert-Level Performance in Laparoscopic Suturing?

Mastery learning assumes that given enough time and appropriate instructional strategies, most trainees will be able to achieve proficiency. Expert-level performance requires numerous hours of intensive and focus practice. We aimed to study whether it was possible for surgical trainees to achieve ex...

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Published inJournal of surgical education Vol. 77; no. 5; pp. 1138 - 1145
Main Authors Gabrysz-Forget, Fanny, Bonds, Morgan, Lovett, Marissa, Alseidi, Adnan, Ghaderi, Iman, Nepomnayshy, Dmitry
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States Elsevier Inc 01.09.2020
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Summary:Mastery learning assumes that given enough time and appropriate instructional strategies, most trainees will be able to achieve proficiency. Expert-level performance requires numerous hours of intensive and focus practice. We aimed to study whether it was possible for surgical trainees to achieve expert-derived proficiency level in laparoscopic suturing using the Advanced Training in Laparoscopic Suturing (ATLAS) curriculum over a short period of time. A multicenter IRB approved prospective study included surgery residents and minimally invasive fellows. Participants underwent weekly supervised instruction and assessments of ATLAS skills and self-directed practice between sessions over 12 weeks. Participants were asked to practice until they achieved previously established proficiency benchmarks of expert laparoscopic surgeons. Fifteen participants, PGY2 to PGY6, from 3 institutions practiced on the ATLAS curriculum. Three participants were able to achieve proficiency on the entire curriculum, with a cumulative practice time varying between 3.4 and 7.6 hours. Individual tasks had varying degrees of difficulty ranging from 85% proficiency on task 1 to 33.3% proficiency for task 6. Using a mixed-method model, the mean cumulative hours of practice to reach the benchmark threshold was estimated for each task and varied from 4.5 to 13.2 hours. The improved performance was associated with higher PGY level and proficiency in FLS. This study demonstrates that it is possible for some senior surgical trainees to achieve proficiency in an expert-level laparoscopic suturing curriculum. This study establishes a learning curve for each ATLAS individual task. Some learners may not be able to achieve proficiency on the entire curriculum over a short period of practice. Additional studies are needed to assess how to shorten the learning curve with effective instructional methods such as expert-guided training with immediate feedback.
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ISSN:1931-7204
1878-7452
DOI:10.1016/j.jsurg.2020.02.026