Journal of Robotic Surgery, volume 18, issue 1, publication number 342

IMRA/SRS Delphi consensus on international standards for common core components of robotic surgical training design

Jessica Wynn 1
Anthony Costello 1
Kirsten Larkins 2, 3
Daniel Costello 1, 4
Ahmed Ghazi 5
Kieran Ryan 6
Kevin Barry 6
Matthew Gray 1
Anthony Gallagher 7
Andrew Hung 8
Alexander Heriot 1, 2, 3
Satish Warrier 1, 2, 3
Farleigh Reeves 1, 4
Justin Collins 9
Phil Dundee 1, 4
Justin Peters 1
David Homewood 1
Dean Driscoll 1
OWEN NIALL 1, 10
Tayla Fay 1, 3
Ajit Sachdeva 11
Henry Woo 12
Richard Satava 11
Helen Mohan 1, 2, 3
Show full list: 24 authors
1
 
International Medical Robotics Academy (IMRA), Melbourne, Australia
5
 
Department of Urology, John Hopkins Hospital, Baltimore, USA
7
 
ORSI Academy, Melle, Belgium
8
 
Department of Urology, Cedars-Sinai Medical Centre, Los Angeles, USA
12
 
Royal Australasian College of Surgeons, Melbourne, Australia
Publication typeJournal Article
Publication date2024-09-19
scimago Q2
SJR0.661
CiteScore4.2
Impact factor2.2
ISSN18632483, 18632491
Abstract

Robotic surgery has expanded internationally at pace. There are multiple local robotic training pathways but there is inconsistency in standardisation of core common components for curricula internationally. A framework is required to define key objectives that can be implemented across robotic training ecosystems. This Delphi consensus aimed to provide recommendations for core considerations in robotic training design across diverse training environments internationally. A literature search was performed and an international steering committee (AG, KL, JW, HM, TC) proposed key components for contemporary robotic training design and a modified Delphi approach was used to gather stakeholder opinion. The outcomes were then discussed at a face-to-face international expert consensus at the IMRA educational session at the Society of Robotic Surgery (SRS) meeting and final voting was conducted on outstanding items. Stakeholders included robotic surgeons, proctors, trainees and robotic surgical training providers. There was consensus achieved in 139 statements organised into 15 themes. There was 100% agreement that standardised themes in robotic curricula may improve patient safety. Key take-home messages include—training curricula should be multiplatform, non-technical skills are an important component of a robotic curriculum as well as console and bedside skills, clinically relevant performance metrics should be used for assessment where available, the reliance on cadaveric and live animal models should be reduced as high-fidelity synthetic models emerge, and stepwise component training is useful for advanced procedural training. These consensus recommendations are intended to guide design of fit for purpose contemporary robotic surgical curricula. Integration of these components into robotic training pathways internationally is recommended.

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