Tracking Residents' Surgical Outcomes Using Data from the Quality In-Training Initiative.

J Surg Educ

Department of Surgery, University of Virginia Charlottesville, Virginia 22908; Surgical Outcomes Research Center, University of Virginia Charlottesville, Virginia 22908. Electronic address:

Published: August 2024

Objectives: Monitoring resident trainees' patient outcomes is essential to improving surgical performance; however, resident-specific follow-up is rarely provided in the current surgical training environment. Whether there is a correlation between individual resident's surgical performance and patients' clinical outcomes remains undefined. In this study, we aimed to use risk-adjusted patient outcomes as an educational tool to track individual surgical trainee performance.

Study Design: American College of Surgeons National Surgical Quality Improvement Program (ACS NSQIP) appendectomy and partial colectomy operations (2013-2021) were examined. Residents performing ≥25 operations were included. The primary outcome was ACS NSQIP-defined morbidity adjusted using estimated probability of morbidity. Observed-to-expected ratios (O/E) of morbidity measured overall performance and risk-adjusted cumulative sum (RA-CUSUM) methodology represented surgical resident's performance over time.

Setting: Academic quaternary care institution.

Participants: Highest-ranking surgical resident participating in an operation and included in Quality In-Training Initiative.

Results: A total of 449 operations were examined. 12 residents performed 343 appendectomy operations. 7 residents (29.3 ± 5.1 operations each) did not have any postoperative morbidity and demonstrated better-than-expected patient outcomes. Three residents did not have morbidity after their seventh/eleventh/fifteenth appendectomies. Two residents (case volume 29, 33) had an O/E ratio > 3. Partial colectomy (n = 106) performed by 4 residents had 2 residents (case volume 30, 26) with better-than-expected outcomes and 2 with worse-than-expected (case volume 25, 25).

Conclusion: Longitudinal monitoring of postoperative patient outcomes provides an opportunity for trainee self-reflection and system examination. RA-CUSUM methodology offers sequential monitoring allowing for early evaluation and intervention when RA-CUSUM results for a trainee demonstrate higher-than-expected morbidity.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11260530PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jsurg.2024.05.012DOI Listing

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