Intraoperative fluoroscopy skills in distal radius fracture surgery: valid and reliable assessment on a novel immersive virtual reality simulator.


Journal

Acta orthopaedica
ISSN: 1745-3682
Titre abrégé: Acta Orthop
Pays: Sweden
ID NLM: 101231512

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
28 Aug 2024
Historique:
received: 08 04 2024
medline: 28 8 2024
pubmed: 28 8 2024
entrez: 28 8 2024
Statut: epublish

Résumé

 Orthopedic trainees must be able to perform intraoperative fluoroscopy imaging to assess the surgical result after volar locking plate surgeries of distal radius fractures. Guided by Messick's contemporary validity framework, the aim of our study was to gather evidence of validity for a test of proficiency for intraoperative imaging of a distal radius fracture using a novel immersive virtual reality simulator.  11 novices and 9 experienced surgeons employed at orthopedic departments completed 2 individual simulator sessions. At each session the participants performed 3 repetitions of an intraoperative fluoroscopic control of a distal radius fracture, consisting of 5 different fluoroscopic views. Several performance metrics were automatically recorded by the simulator and compared between the 2 groups.  Simulator metrics for 3 of the 5 fluoroscopic views could discriminate between novices and experienced surgeons. An estimated composite score based on these 3 views showed good test-retest reliability, ICC = 0.82 (confidence interval 0.65-0.92; P < 0.001). A discriminatory standard was set at a composite score of 6.15 points resulting in 1 false positive (i.e., novice scoring better than the standard), and 1 false negative (i.e., experienced surgeon scoring worse than the standard).  This study provided validity evidence from all 5 sources of Messick's contemporary validity framework (content, response process, internal structure, relationship with other variables, and consequences) for a simulation-based test of proficiency in intraoperative fluoroscopic control of a distal radius fracture fixated by a volar locking plate.

Sections du résumé

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE OBJECTIVE
 Orthopedic trainees must be able to perform intraoperative fluoroscopy imaging to assess the surgical result after volar locking plate surgeries of distal radius fractures. Guided by Messick's contemporary validity framework, the aim of our study was to gather evidence of validity for a test of proficiency for intraoperative imaging of a distal radius fracture using a novel immersive virtual reality simulator.
METHODS METHODS
 11 novices and 9 experienced surgeons employed at orthopedic departments completed 2 individual simulator sessions. At each session the participants performed 3 repetitions of an intraoperative fluoroscopic control of a distal radius fracture, consisting of 5 different fluoroscopic views. Several performance metrics were automatically recorded by the simulator and compared between the 2 groups.
RESULTS RESULTS
 Simulator metrics for 3 of the 5 fluoroscopic views could discriminate between novices and experienced surgeons. An estimated composite score based on these 3 views showed good test-retest reliability, ICC = 0.82 (confidence interval 0.65-0.92; P < 0.001). A discriminatory standard was set at a composite score of 6.15 points resulting in 1 false positive (i.e., novice scoring better than the standard), and 1 false negative (i.e., experienced surgeon scoring worse than the standard).
CONCLUSION CONCLUSIONS
 This study provided validity evidence from all 5 sources of Messick's contemporary validity framework (content, response process, internal structure, relationship with other variables, and consequences) for a simulation-based test of proficiency in intraoperative fluoroscopic control of a distal radius fracture fixated by a volar locking plate.

Identifiants

pubmed: 39192817
doi: 10.2340/17453674.2024.41345
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article

Langues

eng

Sous-ensembles de citation

IM

Pagination

477-484

Auteurs

Marie Sønderup (M)

Department of Clinical Medicine, Faculty of Health Science, University of Copenhagen.

Amandus Gustafsson (A)

Department of Clinical Medicine, Faculty of Health Science, University of Copenhagen; Copenhagen Academy for Medical Education and Simulation (CAMES), Rigshospitalet.

Lars Konge (L)

Department of Clinical Medicine, Faculty of Health Science, University of Copenhagen; Copenhagen Academy for Medical Education and Simulation (CAMES), Rigshospitalet.

Mads Emil Jacobsen (ME)

Department of Clinical Medicine, Faculty of Health Science, University of Copenhagen; Copenhagen Academy for Medical Education and Simulation (CAMES), Rigshospitalet; Department of Orthopedic Surgery, Center for Orthopedic Research an Innovation (CORI), Næstved Slagelse Ringsted Hospitals, Denmark madsemil4@gmail.com.

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Classifications MeSH