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Evidence summaries

Virtual Reality Training for Surgical Trainees in Laparoscopic Surgery

Virtual reality training may supplement standard laparoscopic surgical training of apprenticeship and it seems to be at least as effective as video trainer training in supplementing standard laparoscopic training. Level of evidence: "C"

A Cochrane review [Abstract] 1 included 23 studies with a total of 612 participants comparing virtual reality versus video trainer training (4 trials); virtual reality versus no training or standard laparoscopic training (12 trials); virtual reality, video trainer training and no training, or standard laparoscopic training (4 trials); and different methods of virtual reality training (3 trials).

In trainees without prior surgical laparoscopic experience, virtual reality training decreased the time taken to complete a task (SMD -1.09; 95% CI -1.50 to -0.68; 5 trials 119 participants), increased accuracy, and decreased errors (SMD 0.5, 95% CI 0.00 to 0.99; 3 trials 73 participants) compared with no training. Virtual reality group was more accurate than video trainer training group (SMD 0.68 95% Cl 0.05 to 1.31; 1 trial 41 participants).

In the participants with limited laparoscopic experience, virtual reality training reduced operating time and error better than standard in the laparoscopic training group; composite operative performance score was better in the virtual reality group than in the video trainer group.

Comment: The quality of evidence is downgraded by study quality (inadequate or unclear allocation concealment) and by indirectness (lack of patient-oriented outcomes).

    References

    • Gurusamy KS, Aggarwal R, Palanivelu L, Davidson BR. Virtual reality training for surgical trainees in laparoscopic surgery. Cochrane Database Syst Rev 2009 Jan 21;(1):CD006575. [PubMed].

Primary/Secondary Keywords