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The reality of general surgery training and increased complexity of abdominal wall hernia surgery

INTRODUCTION: The Accreditation and Certification of Hernia Centers and Surgeons (ACCESS) Group of the European Hernia Society (EHS) recognizes that there is a growing need to train specialist abdominal wall surgeons. The most important and relevant argument for this proposal and statement is the gr...

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Autores principales: Köckerling, F., Sheen, A. J., Berrevoet, F., Campanelli, G., Cuccurullo, D., Fortelny, R., Friis-Andersen, H., Gillion, J. F., Gorjanc, J., Kopelman, D., Lopez-Cano, M., Morales-Conde, S., Österberg, J., Reinpold, W., Simmermacher, R. K. J., Smietanski, M., Weyhe, D., Simons, M. P.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Springer Paris 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6938469/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31754953
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10029-019-02062-z
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author Köckerling, F.
Sheen, A. J.
Berrevoet, F.
Campanelli, G.
Cuccurullo, D.
Fortelny, R.
Friis-Andersen, H.
Gillion, J. F.
Gorjanc, J.
Kopelman, D.
Lopez-Cano, M.
Morales-Conde, S.
Österberg, J.
Reinpold, W.
Simmermacher, R. K. J.
Smietanski, M.
Weyhe, D.
Simons, M. P.
author_facet Köckerling, F.
Sheen, A. J.
Berrevoet, F.
Campanelli, G.
Cuccurullo, D.
Fortelny, R.
Friis-Andersen, H.
Gillion, J. F.
Gorjanc, J.
Kopelman, D.
Lopez-Cano, M.
Morales-Conde, S.
Österberg, J.
Reinpold, W.
Simmermacher, R. K. J.
Smietanski, M.
Weyhe, D.
Simons, M. P.
author_sort Köckerling, F.
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: The Accreditation and Certification of Hernia Centers and Surgeons (ACCESS) Group of the European Hernia Society (EHS) recognizes that there is a growing need to train specialist abdominal wall surgeons. The most important and relevant argument for this proposal and statement is the growing acceptance of the increasing complexity of abdominal wall surgery due to newer techniques, more challenging cases and the required ‘tailored’ approach to such surgery. There is now also an increasing public awareness with social media, whereby optimal treatment results are demanded by patients. However, to date the complexity of abdominal wall surgery has not been properly or adequately defined in the current literature. METHODS: A systematic search of the available literature was performed in May 2019 using Medline, PubMed, Scopus, Embase, Springer Link, and the Cochrane Library, with 75 publications identified as relevant. In addition, an analysis of data from the Herniamed Hernia Registry was performed. The percentage of patients with hernia- or patient-related characteristics which unfavorably impacted the outcome of inguinal and incisional hernia repair was also calculated. RESULTS: All present guidelines for abdominal wall surgery recommend the utilization of a ‘tailored’ approach. This relies on the prerequisite that any surgical technique used has already been mastered, as well as the recognized learning curves for each of the several techniques that can be used for both inguinal hernia (Lichtenstein, TEP, TAPP, Shouldice) and incisional hernia repairs (laparoscopic IPOM, open sublay, open IPOM, open onlay, open or endoscopic component separation technique). Other hernia- and patient-related characteristics that have recognized complexity include emergency surgery, obesity, recurrent hernias, bilateral inguinal hernias, groin hernia in women, scrotal hernias, large defects, high ASA scores, > 80 years of age, increased medical risk factors and previous lower abdominal surgery. The proportion of patients with at least one of these characteristics in the Herniamed Hernia Registry in the case of both inguinal and incisional hernia is noted to be relatively high at around 70%. In general surgery training approximately 50–100 hernia repairs on average are performed by each trainee, with around only 25 laparo-endoscopic procedures. CONCLUSION: A tailored approach is now employed and seen more so in hernia surgery and this fact is referred to and highlighted in the contemporaneous hernia guidelines published to date. In addition, with the increasing complexity of abdominal wall surgery, the number of procedures actually performed by trainees is no longer considered adequate to overcome any recognized learning curve. Therefore, to supplement general surgery training young surgeons should be offered a clinical fellowship to obtain an additional qualification as an abdominal wall surgeon and thus improve their clinical and operative experience under supervision in this field. Practicing general surgeons with a special interest in hernia surgery can undertake intensive further training in this area by participating in clinical work shadowing in hernia centers, workshops and congresses.
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spelling pubmed-69384692020-01-14 The reality of general surgery training and increased complexity of abdominal wall hernia surgery Köckerling, F. Sheen, A. J. Berrevoet, F. Campanelli, G. Cuccurullo, D. Fortelny, R. Friis-Andersen, H. Gillion, J. F. Gorjanc, J. Kopelman, D. Lopez-Cano, M. Morales-Conde, S. Österberg, J. Reinpold, W. Simmermacher, R. K. J. Smietanski, M. Weyhe, D. Simons, M. P. Hernia Review INTRODUCTION: The Accreditation and Certification of Hernia Centers and Surgeons (ACCESS) Group of the European Hernia Society (EHS) recognizes that there is a growing need to train specialist abdominal wall surgeons. The most important and relevant argument for this proposal and statement is the growing acceptance of the increasing complexity of abdominal wall surgery due to newer techniques, more challenging cases and the required ‘tailored’ approach to such surgery. There is now also an increasing public awareness with social media, whereby optimal treatment results are demanded by patients. However, to date the complexity of abdominal wall surgery has not been properly or adequately defined in the current literature. METHODS: A systematic search of the available literature was performed in May 2019 using Medline, PubMed, Scopus, Embase, Springer Link, and the Cochrane Library, with 75 publications identified as relevant. In addition, an analysis of data from the Herniamed Hernia Registry was performed. The percentage of patients with hernia- or patient-related characteristics which unfavorably impacted the outcome of inguinal and incisional hernia repair was also calculated. RESULTS: All present guidelines for abdominal wall surgery recommend the utilization of a ‘tailored’ approach. This relies on the prerequisite that any surgical technique used has already been mastered, as well as the recognized learning curves for each of the several techniques that can be used for both inguinal hernia (Lichtenstein, TEP, TAPP, Shouldice) and incisional hernia repairs (laparoscopic IPOM, open sublay, open IPOM, open onlay, open or endoscopic component separation technique). Other hernia- and patient-related characteristics that have recognized complexity include emergency surgery, obesity, recurrent hernias, bilateral inguinal hernias, groin hernia in women, scrotal hernias, large defects, high ASA scores, > 80 years of age, increased medical risk factors and previous lower abdominal surgery. The proportion of patients with at least one of these characteristics in the Herniamed Hernia Registry in the case of both inguinal and incisional hernia is noted to be relatively high at around 70%. In general surgery training approximately 50–100 hernia repairs on average are performed by each trainee, with around only 25 laparo-endoscopic procedures. CONCLUSION: A tailored approach is now employed and seen more so in hernia surgery and this fact is referred to and highlighted in the contemporaneous hernia guidelines published to date. In addition, with the increasing complexity of abdominal wall surgery, the number of procedures actually performed by trainees is no longer considered adequate to overcome any recognized learning curve. Therefore, to supplement general surgery training young surgeons should be offered a clinical fellowship to obtain an additional qualification as an abdominal wall surgeon and thus improve their clinical and operative experience under supervision in this field. Practicing general surgeons with a special interest in hernia surgery can undertake intensive further training in this area by participating in clinical work shadowing in hernia centers, workshops and congresses. Springer Paris 2019-11-21 2019 /pmc/articles/PMC6938469/ /pubmed/31754953 http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10029-019-02062-z Text en © The Author(s) 2019 Open AccessThis article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made.
spellingShingle Review
Köckerling, F.
Sheen, A. J.
Berrevoet, F.
Campanelli, G.
Cuccurullo, D.
Fortelny, R.
Friis-Andersen, H.
Gillion, J. F.
Gorjanc, J.
Kopelman, D.
Lopez-Cano, M.
Morales-Conde, S.
Österberg, J.
Reinpold, W.
Simmermacher, R. K. J.
Smietanski, M.
Weyhe, D.
Simons, M. P.
The reality of general surgery training and increased complexity of abdominal wall hernia surgery
title The reality of general surgery training and increased complexity of abdominal wall hernia surgery
title_full The reality of general surgery training and increased complexity of abdominal wall hernia surgery
title_fullStr The reality of general surgery training and increased complexity of abdominal wall hernia surgery
title_full_unstemmed The reality of general surgery training and increased complexity of abdominal wall hernia surgery
title_short The reality of general surgery training and increased complexity of abdominal wall hernia surgery
title_sort reality of general surgery training and increased complexity of abdominal wall hernia surgery
topic Review
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6938469/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31754953
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10029-019-02062-z
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