| Literature DB >> 27198548 |
Mathijs D Blikkendaal1, Sara R C Driessen1, Sharon P Rodrigues1, Johann P T Rhemrev2, Maddy J G H Smeets2, Jenny Dankelman3, John J van den Dobbelsteen3, Frank Willem Jansen4,5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Minimally invasive surgery (MIS) is frequently compromised by surgical flow disturbances due to technology- and equipment-related failures. Compared with MIS in a conventional cart-based OR, performing MIS in a dedicated integrated operating room (OR) is supposed to be beneficial to patient safety. The aim of this study was to compare a conventional OR with an integrated OR with regard to the incidence and effect of equipment-related surgical flow disturbances during an advanced laparoscopic gynecological procedure [laparoscopic hysterectomy (LH)].Entities:
Keywords: Integrated operating room; Minimally invasive surgery; Patient safety; Surgical flow disturbances; Technical equipment; Video observation
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27198548 PMCID: PMC5216055 DOI: 10.1007/s00464-016-4971-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Surg Endosc ISSN: 0930-2794 Impact factor: 4.584
Fig. 1Conventional cart-based OR (dome cameras are circled)
Surgical phases and (potential) surgical steps commonly undertaken during laparoscopic hysterectomy (adjusted from Den Boer et al. [26])
| Surgical phases | Surgical steps |
|---|---|
| 1. Preoperative | |
| 1.1. OR ready (clean, air quality, pressure) | |
| 1.2. Instruments and devices present and functioning | |
| 1.3. Patient to OR | |
| 1.4. Patient on OR table | |
| 1.5. Time-out procedure | |
| 1.6. Position patient on OR table | |
| 1.7. Team scrubs in washing room | |
| 1.8. Sterile preparation of instruments | |
| 2. Anesthesia and surgical preparation | |
| 2.1. Anesthesia and intubation | |
| 2.2. Sterilization operating area | |
| 2.3. Draping the patient | |
| 2.4. Insert urine catheter | |
| 2.5. Insert mobilizer in uterus | |
| 2.6. Install instruments | |
| 3. Procedure | |
| 3.1. Create CO2 pneumoperitoneum | 3.1.1. First incision and insert Veress or Hasson |
| 3.1.2. Insufflate the abdomen | |
| 3.2. Insert access ports | 3.2.1. Insert first (optical) port |
| 3.2.2. Insert laparoscope | |
| 3.2.3. Inspect abdomen (active bleeding, 360 look, operatability) | |
| 3.2.4. Insert second port under direct sight | |
| 3.2.5. Inspect and judge operatability/unexpected pathology) | |
| 3.2.6. Insert third port under direct sight | |
| 3.2.7. Insert fourth port under direct sight | |
| 3.3. Preparation operative area | 3.3.1. Dissect adhesions to uterus/ovaria/intestine in pelvis |
| 3.3.2. Mobilize intestine out of pelvis | |
| 3.4. Expose uterine arteries | 3.4.1. Dissect ligaments and mobilize uterus |
| 3.4.2. Skeletonized uterine arteries | |
| 3.4.3. Push off bladder | |
| 3.4.4. Identify location of ureters | |
| 3.5. Transect uterine arteries | 3.5.1. Transect left uterine artery |
| 3.5.2. Transect right uterine artery | |
| 3.5.3. Check color of uterus | |
| 3.5.4. Check if bladder and arteries are skeletonized enough | |
| 3.6. Separate uterus from vagina | 3.6.1. Colpotomy |
| 3.6.2. Pneumoperitoneum is lost | |
| 3.7. Specimen retrieval | 3.7.1. Morcellated uterus |
| 3.7.2. Extract uterus through vagina | |
| 3.8. Closure of the vaginal cuff | 3.8.1. Insert needle |
| 3.8.2. Suture vaginal cuff | |
| 3.8.3. Extract needle | |
| 3.9. Final check and irrigation | 3.9.1. Check hemostasis |
| 3.9.2. Check vaginal cuff stump | |
| 3.10. Close-up patient | 3.10.1. Remove instruments |
| 3.10.2. Remove accessory operating ports (under direct sight) | |
| 3.10.3. Check access wounds/bleeding | |
| 3.10.4. Release CO2 from abdomen | |
| 3.10.5. Remove laparoscope and first trocar port | |
| 3.10.6. Suture port wounds | |
| 3.10.7. Remove draping | |
| 4. Extubation | |
| 4.1. Patient awake | |
| 4.2. Extubation | |
| 5. Postoperative | |
| 5.1. Patient from OR table to ward bed | |
| 5.2. Sign-out procedure | |
| 5.3. Bring patient to recovery | |
| 6. Interoperative | |
| 6.1. Cleaning of the OR |
Observed types of surgical flow disturbances
| Equipment-/instrument-related | Setup device/connection |
| Intraoperative repositioning | |
| Malfunctioning | |
| Not present | |
| Sterility | |
| Other/unclear | |
| Environmental | Pager/telephone |
| Door washing room | |
| Radio use | |
| Personnel-related | Communication failure |
| Irrelevant conversation | |
| Procedure-related | Extra coagulation bleeding-site |
| Unexpected adhesions | |
| Limited vision (condensation/smoke) | |
| Adverse event | |
| Conversion to laparotomy |
Effect of observed surgical flow disturbances (according to Persoon et al. [25])
| 1. Events with the potential to distract the sterile team |
| 2. Sterile team member momentarily distracted: possible involvement of a single sterile member in an event not related to the primary task, e.g., a short head turn in response to a visual or auditory stimulus |
| 3. Sterile team member engages in distraction: similar distraction in 2, but the sterile member engages with the source of distraction by verbally responding while maintaining primary task activity (multitasking) |
| 4. Sterile team member’s primary task interrupted: a single team member ceases his/her current tasks to engage entirely in the distracting stimulus |
| 5. Sterile team momentarily distracted: two or more sterile team members respond to a stimulus with a short head turn, no verbal response |
| 6. Sterile team engage in secondary tasks: two or more team members engage with the source of distraction by verbally responding while maintaining primary task activity |
| 7. Sterile team’s work interrupted—operation flow disrupted: interruption of the current primary task of the sterile team, the operation flow is disrupted |
Fig. 2Inclusion of eligible procedures
Patient and procedure characteristics of analyzed LHs performed in the Bronovo Hospital, The Hague, between January 2011 and April 2012
| Conventional OR ( | Integrated OR ( |
| |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Median | IQR | Median | IQR | ||
| Age (years) | 48.2 | 43.9–55.2 | 47.1 | 43.5–56.0 | .850a |
| BMI (kg/m2) | 24.9 | 22.7–27.3 | 25.3 | 22.5–28.9 | .871a |
| Uterine weight (gram) | 165 | 97–256 | 149 | 107–208 | .643a |
| Operating time (minutes)b | 122 | ±31 | 124 | ±36 | .816c |
| Estimated Blood loss (mL) | 100 | 50–175 | 75 | 50–150 | .702a |
| Hospital stay (days) | 2.0 | 1.1–2.1 | 1.9 | 1.3–2.0 | .795a |
| Benign indication (%) | 70.0 % | 55.0 % | .514d | ||
IQR Inter quartile range (25th and 75th percentile), BMI body mass index
aMann–Whitney test
bTime according to medical file
cMean ± standard deviation and Student’s t test because of normal distribution
dPearson’s Chi-square
Adverse events all analyzed LHs. All adverse events did not require re-operation and occurred postoperatively
| Conventional OR ( | Integrated OR ( | Overall ( | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Infection | 1a (5.0 %) | 0 | 1 (2.5 %) |
| Blood loss > 1L | 0 (0 %) | 1b (5.0 %) | 1 (2.5 %) |
| Others | 1c (5.0 %) | 0 | 1 (2.5 %) |
| Total | 2 (10.0 %) | 1 (5.0 %) | 3 (7.5 %) |
aUrinary tract infection
bPostoperative drop in hemoglobin. CT scan showed approximately 1500 cc free fluid intraabdominally. Vital signs were stable, and after a blood transfusion with 2 packed cells, hemoglobin remained stable
cPatient suffered from sensibility loss in her right hand. The neurologist diagnosed a neuropraxia of the median nerve. Conservative management resulted in almost complete recovery
Durations of all analyzed LHs (in minutes:seconds)
| Observation duration | Conventional OR ( | Integrated OR ( | Total ( | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 53 h:42:55 | 50 h:02:38 | 103 h:45:33 | |||||
| Mean | ±SD | Min–Max | Mean | ±SD | Min–Max |
| |
| Procedure timea | 161:09 | ±27:38 | 107:37–210:24 | 150:08 | ±34:09 | 98:24–214:52 | .269 |
| Operating timeb | 126:17 | ±26:35 | 66:20–175:44 | 115:42 | ±30:38 | 71:48–174:58 | .251 |
aTime between patient entering OR and leaving OR
bTime between first incision and last suture (skin to skin)
cUnpaired t test calculated using http://www.graphpad.com/quickcalcs/ttest1/?Format=SD
Devices and instruments accountable for surgical flow disturbances with respect to setup of device, disturbance or problem in general, and intraoperative repositioning
| Conventional OR ( | Integrated OR ( | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Surgical flow disturbance regarding |
| Total duration (h:min:sec) |
| Total duration (h:min:sec) |
| Devices | ||||
| Diathermy | 27 | 00:46:36 | 30 | 00:59:00 |
| Endoscope | 2 | 00:01:00 | 3 | 00:17:11a |
| Insufflator | 19 | 00:21:07 | 21 | 00:17:34 |
| Irrigation suction | 7 | 00:09:15 | 9 | 00:05:44 |
| Light source | 3 | 00:00:50 | 4 | 00:02:24 |
| Morcellation device | 1 | 00:03:55 | 4 | 00:04:54 |
| Pedals | – | 6 | 00:04:33 | |
| Instruments | ||||
| Instruments—dismountable | 25 | 01:52:38 | 20 | 00:45:06b |
| Instruments—non-dismountable | 11 | 00:19:04 | 13 | 00:25:34 |
| Trocar | 3 | 00:01:39 | 1 | 00:00:53 |
| Devices—OR-related | ||||
| Monitor | 10 | 00:17:52 | 46 | 01:26:35c |
| Overhead light | 3 | 00:00:52 | 2 | 00:00:49 |
| Table | 6 | 00:05:05 | 7 | 00:11:18 |
| Tower | 11 | 00:09:16 | 6 | 00:05:14 |
aDifference in total duration caused by one event lasting 16 min
bDifference in total duration caused by a variety of non-OR-related problems
cMean degree of influence 4.7 ± 2.2 versus 4.1 ± 1.7, p = .37
Fig. 3Duration (minutes:seconds) of intraoperative repositioning of a monitor in the integrated OR (per procedure, chronological order)