Artigo Revisado por pares

Fellowship Colonoscopy Training and Preparedness for Independent Gastroenterology Practice

2015; Lippincott Williams & Wilkins; Volume: 50; Issue: 1 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1097/mcg.0000000000000376

ISSN

1539-2031

Autores

Vilas Patwardhan, Joseph D. Feuerstein, Neil Sengupta, Jeffrey J. Lewandowski, Roy Tsao, Darshan Kothari, Harry T. Anastopoulos, RB Doyle, Daniel A. Leffler, Sunil G. Sheth,

Tópico(s)

Colorectal Cancer Surgical Treatments

Resumo

To objectively assess when gastroenterology (GI) fellows achieve technical competency to perform colonoscopy independently.New guidelines to assess the procedural competency of GI fellows in training have been developed. Although comprehensive, they do not account for the quality metrics to which independently practicing gastroenterologists are held.We performed a prospective study examining consecutive colonoscopies performed by GI fellows from November 2013 through March 2014 at an academic medical center. Using a brief postprocedure questionnaire and the online medical record, we measured rates of independent fellow cecal intubation rate (CIR), insertion time to the cecum (cecal IT), and independent polypectomy rate. Our secondary outcomes were adenoma detection rate and polyp detection rate.A total of 898 colonoscopies performed by 10 GI fellows were analyzed. In the multivariate analysis, CIR [odds ratio (OR)=1.29, P=0.012], cecal IT (β-coefficient=0.19, P=0.006), and rates of unassisted independent snare polypectomy (OR=1.36, P 90%, cecal IT between 7 and 10 minutes, and independent polypectomy rate of 90% with further improvement in cecal IT to 95% after 700 cases.Current procedural recommendations for fellowship training may underestimate the technical skill necessary for independent GI practice upon completion of fellowship. Technical proficiency in snare polypectomy may lag behind proficiency in cecal intubation.

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