Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5940927 | The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 2009 | 5 Pages |
BackgroundRobotic totally endoscopic coronary bypass (TECAB) surgery was developed during the past decade, and younger surgeons need to be trained in this new modality. This study assessed the learning curves and independent TECAB performance of 2 junior surgeons undergoing TECAB training.MethodsTwo surgeons in training performed portions of 44 of 239 robotic TECAB operations, including left (LIMA) and right interior mammary artery (RIMA) harvesting, lipectomy, pericardiotomy, and IMA to left anterior descending coronary artery (LAD) anastomotic suturing.ResultsThe procedure portions performed faster by the senior surgeon vs trainees were, in minutes (range), lipectomy, 5 (2 to 18) vs 10 (5 to 21; p < 0.001); pericardiotomy, 5 (1 to 21) vs 7 (3 to 16; p = 0.001); RIMA takedown, 35 (25 to 48) vs 49 (40 to 55; p = 0.034); and LIMA to LAD anastomosis, 26 (12 to 100) vs 34 (24 to 67; p = 0.043). After assuming senior roles in the robotic cardiac surgery program, the 2 trained surgeons performed 14 TECABs (LIMA to LAD) without the senior surgeon. Lipectomy took 5 (3 to 8) minutes; pericardiotomy, 5 (2 to 10) minutes; LIMA takedown, 43 (27 to 70) minutes; LIMA to LAD anastomosis, 24 (15 to 60) minutes, cardiopulmonary bypass time, 73 (40 to 126) minutes; and aortic endo-occlusion time, 53 (0 to 83) minutes. No hospital deaths occurred.ConclusionsTECAB can be well taught with a stepwise training program involving portions of the procedure performed by trainees. With such an approach, independent performance after training can be within adequate time limits and yields seemingly acceptable results.