Assessing colonoscopic inspection skill using a virtual withdrawal simulation: A preliminary validation of performance metrics

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Abstract

Background: The effectiveness of colonoscopy for diagnosing and preventing colon cancer is largely dependent on the ability of endoscopists to fully inspect the colonic mucosa, which they achieve primarily through skilled manipulation of the colonoscope during withdrawal. Performance assessment during live procedures is problematic. However, a virtual withdrawal simulation can help identify and parameterise actions linked to successful inspection, and offer standardised assessments for trainees. Methods: Eleven experienced endoscopists and 18 endoscopy novices (medical students) completed a mucosal inspection task during three simulated colonoscopic withdrawals. The two groups were compared on 10 performance metrics to preliminarily assess the validity of these measures to describe inspection quality. Four metrics were related to aspects of polyp detection: percentage of polyp markers found; number of polyp markers found per minute; percentage of the mucosal surface illuminated by the colonoscope (≥0.5 s); and percentage of polyp markers illuminated (≥2.5 s) but not identified. A further six metrics described the movement of the colonoscope: withdrawal time; linear distance travelled by the colonoscope tip; total distance travelled by the colonoscope tip; and distance travelled by the colonoscope tip due to movement of the up/down angulation control, movement of the left/right angulation control, and axial shaft rotation. Results: Statistically significant experienced-novice differences were found for 8 of the 10 performance metrics (p's

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Zupanc, C. M., Wallis, G. M., Hill, A., Burgess-Limerick, R., Riek, S., Plooy, A. M., … Hewett, D. G. (2017). Assessing colonoscopic inspection skill using a virtual withdrawal simulation: A preliminary validation of performance metrics. BMC Medical Education, 17(1). https://doi.org/10.1186/s12909-017-0948-6

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