Literature DB >> 35047332

Expertise in colonoscopy intubation does not predict diagnostic accuracy: a simulation-based study.

Andreas S Vilmann1, Christian Lachenmeier1, Morten Bo S Svendsen1, Bo Soendergaard1,2, Yoon S Park3, Lars Bo Svendsen1,4, Lars Konge1,5.   

Abstract

Background and study aims  Studies have linked cecal intubation rate with adenoma detection rate; however, the direct association between technical performance during colonoscopy intubation and withdrawal has never been explored. Thus, it remains unclear whether gentle and efficient intubation predicts superior mucosal inspection. The aim of this study was to investigate the correlation between performance during intubation and withdrawal in a simulation-based setup. Methods  Twenty-four physicians with various experience in colonoscopy performed twice on the Endoscopy Training System (ETS). Intubation skills were evaluated by assessing tasks on the ETS related to intubation (scope manipulation and loop management) and use of a computerized assessment tool called the 3D-Colonoscopy Progression Score (3D-CoPS). Diagnostic accuracy was defined by the number of polyps found during the ETS task of mucosal inspection. Pearson's correlations were calculated to explore associations between intubation skill and diagnostic accuracy. Results  The correlation analysis between 3D-CoPS and number of polyps found during mucosal inspection revealed a weak and insignificant correlation (0.157, P  = 0.3). Likewise, an insignificant correlation was seen between ETS intubation and number of polyps found (0.149, P  = 0.32). Conclusions  We found no evidence to support that technical performance during intubation is correlated with mucosal inspection performance in a simulation-based setting. The Author(s). This is an open access article published by Thieme under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonDerivative-NonCommercial License, permitting copying and reproduction so long as the original work is given appropriate credit. Contents may not be used for commercial purposes, or adapted, remixed, transformed or built upon. (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).

Entities:  

Year:  2022        PMID: 35047332      PMCID: PMC8759934          DOI: 10.1055/a-1618-5525

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Endosc Int Open        ISSN: 2196-9736


Introduction

Colonoscopy is the gold standard for diagnostics of the rectum and colon. Patient safety, diagnostic precision, and criteria for a successful colonoscopy are operator depended 1 2 3 . Therefore, increasing emphasis is being placed on demonstrating quality and competence for an individual endoscopist during intubation and withdrawal. Quality indicators for intubation skills include cecal intubation rate (CIR), subjective assessment tools such as the direct observational procedural skills (DOPS), and computerized assessment tools 4 5 . CIR is a retrospective measure that requires a large number of performed procedures to be a valid quality measure and DOPS is time-consuming for assessors and prone to observer bias. The 3D-Colonoscopy Progression Score (3D-CoPS), however, is a newly developed computerized assessment tool able to assess intubation skills automatically and in an unbiased fashion, which was developed to overcome the downsides of current tools available, making it ideal 6 . Assessing mucosal inspection is primarily based on adenoma detection rates (ADR) and time spent during withdrawal 4 7 . However, calculating the ADR requires a large number of procedures, which makes it inappropriate for assessing individual cases and trainees with few procedures 8 . Furthermore, differences in ADR have been reported even though a minimum withdrawal time was assured 9 10 . This indicates that time as an independent quality factor does not guarantee a high mucosal inspection. Hence, technical skills associated with a high mucosal inspection still remain indefinite. The association between performance during intubation and withdrawal has never been explored. Thus, it remains unclear whether expertise in intubation can predict expertise in mucosal inspection, and therefore, be used as a proxy parameter for overall colonoscopy expertise. The aim of this study was to investigate the correlation between performance during intubation and during withdrawal in a simulation-based setup.

Patients and methods

Participants

Twenty-four physicians with various experience were included. Participant demographics were: mean age 43 years (range 25–66), mean number of total colonoscopies performed 3286 (range 0–10,000), mean number of colonoscopies per year 228 (range 0–700) and mean years since graduation 15 (range 0–39) ( Table 1 ).

Demographics.

Participant numberSex (female/male)AgeTotal colonoscopies Colonoscopies the last year
 1M655000400
 2F3211
 3F3200
 4F2900
 5M2500
 6M293434
 7F281515
 8F3000
 9F563000300
10M6010000300
11M617500550
12M3255
13M3144
14F2800
15F303030
16M5310000600
17M472000700
18M414000400
19M6370001000
20M667000500
21M487000500
22M4810000400
23F2800
24M598000500

Equipment

All tests were performed using an Olympus colonoscope (CF-H180DL, Evis Exera II video center CV-180, Olympus Medical System Ltd, Tokyo, Japan), the Magnetic Endoscopy Imaging (MEI) system called the ScopeGuide (UPD-3, Olympus, Tokyo, Japan), and the Endoscopy Training System (ETS) ( Fig. 1 ) 11 . The ETS consists of two different physical simulators on which five different technical tasks are available. The first simulator is a linear model of the rectum and the sigmoid colon and is equipped with a simulated endoscopic tool, and audio and visual feedback. The first three tasks are performed on this model. The last two tasks are performed on the second simulator, which is a modified version of the Kyoto’s Colonoscopy Training Model. The Colonoscopy Training Model is a realistic rubber model of the human colon with 10 polyps located throughout the rubber colon. The rubber colon can be modified into different forms and case 3 was chosen (Alpha loop in the sigmoid colon). Each participant performed twice on both simulators.
Fig. 1

 The endoscopy training system (ETS).

The endoscopy training system (ETS). The first task, scope manipulation, reflects use of tip deflection and torque of the colonoscope. The goal is to align 10 numbered white triangles located within the model with two black triangles located externally on the video display of lumen. The second task, loop management, is navigation of the colonoscope from anus to cecum, during which the participant will encounter an alpha loop in the sigmoid colon. The purpose of this task is to reach the cecum within a time limit and to correctly manage the formation of a standard alpha loop. The task is scored by time and unsuccessful loop reduction leads to penalties. The third task, mucosal inspection, is inspection of the mucosa during withdrawal from the cecum to the anus. Ten identical polyps are located throughout the colon and as many as possible are to be found. The participants were not informed of the total number of polyps located inside the rubber colon. The three tasks were recorded by an investigator serving as the test proctor. If the time to complete each task surpassed the predetermined cutoff time, a timing score of zero was given. The key metrics and performance time then were used for calculation. Two tasks, tool targeting and retroflection, were left out since they do not represent technical aspects of intubation or withdrawal.

3D-colonoscopy progression score (3D-CoPS):

The ScopeGuide system provides a real-time 3 D image of the shape of the colonoscope inside the abdomen. The 3 D image is based on XYZ-coordinates from electromagnetic coils placed along the length of the colonoscope. During task four, loop management, we collected XYZ-coordinates directly from the ScopeGuide system. Five different technical measures were applied to the XYZ-coordinates. Travel length is the distance of the tip traveled from anus to cecum. Tip progression is a calculation of how closely the tip of the colonoscope travel to the optimal pathway. Chase efficiency evaluates how closely a coil follows the same path as the coil in front. Shaft movement without tip progression refers to the situation where the tip of the colonoscope is lodged but the shaft is moving and potentially stretching the colon wall. Looping is quantification of how looped the colonoscope is during the procedure. The five measurements were built into a composite score, the 3D-CoPS, which is a computerized assessment tool that was developed to assess the technical performance of the progression from anus to cecum 6 .

Outcome measures

The primary outcome was the correlation between intubation skills defined as 3D-CoPS and ETS tasks related to intubation (scope manipulation and loop management, referred to as ETS-intubation), and the number of polyps found during task 5. Secondary outcomes were the correlation between total colonoscopy experience, colonoscopies per year, time spent during mucosal inspection and number of polyps found during task 5.

Ethics

The regional committee of ethics evaluated and approved the study (H-17040471). All participants were provided with oral and written information regarding the trial. Participation was voluntary; no material goods were donated to the participants. The trial was registered (December 22, 2017) at clinicaltrials.gov with trial identification number NCT03401723.

Statistics

Statistical analysis was done with IBM SPSS statistics (PASW, version 22; SPSS Inc, Chicago, Ill). The level of statistical significance was set at α < .05 for all tests. Bivariate correlations were used to test the expectation that intubation performance based on 3D-CoPS and ETS-intubation would be associated with one another and correlated with number of polyps found during the task of mucosal Inspection. Reliability was explored with the test-retest method 12 .

Results

The study was conducted from October 2017 to February 2018 and included 24 participants. One participant was excluded due to unintended movement of the phantom model during the task loop management, which affected the data gathered from the ScopeGuide system, and therefore, the 3D-CoPS. A total of 46 completed data sets were used for the analysis ( Table 2 ).

Results of the 46 completed data sets.

Participant numberTip progression (mean)Travel length (mean)Chase efficiency (mean)Shaft movement without tip progression (mean)Looping (mean)3D-CoPS (mean)Number of polyps found (mean)Time spent inspecting mucosa (mean)ETS-intubation (mean)
 1130454258161.81457–.248120219
 26620910548232.54249.417.543394
 36040113483248.56438.677.5428126
 44900310910210.661620.915226–6
 567533949211.75477–.2476779
 681892610236.80238–.25967228
 7261176341210.511206.035.525751
 8281605171257.69120-.048.526183
 999604936174.80288–.26883239
1088812790204.86154–.28675173
11333936812159.54321–.345.5196169
12374386550222.53262–.165.5277185
133913812486414.5997.817.5286186
14450247547352.6714881.087333107
15100632561240.80610–.07787172
1698483722215.85311–.129.594215
17108783093292.67263–.205.563250
1877412273157.7671–.635.545236
20235912854139.78101–.456.5108213
21241774536158.83263.40594236
22115922818226.90159.167.574168
23336826231166.71593.02641492
24145883527179.7988–.387.595229

Participant number 19 was excluded due to unintended movement of the phantom model during the task of loop management, which affected the data gathered from the ScopeGuide system, and therefore, the 3D-CoPS.

3D-CoPS; 3D-colonoscopy progression score; ETS-intubation, endoscopy training system-intubation.

Participant number 19 was excluded due to unintended movement of the phantom model during the task of loop management, which affected the data gathered from the ScopeGuide system, and therefore, the 3D-CoPS. 3D-CoPS; 3D-colonoscopy progression score; ETS-intubation, endoscopy training system-intubation. A Pearson correlation was done, and a strong test-retest reliability was revealed between 3D-CoPS ( r  = 0.86, P  < 0.001), ETS-intubation ( r  = 0.83, P  < 0.001) and time spent during withdrawal ( r  = 0.71. P  < 0.001). Number of polyps found had a test-retest reliability of 0.54 ( P  = 0.008). As expected, 3D-CoPS and ETS-intubation skills had a moderate to strong correlation (0.58, P  < 0.001) ( Fig. 2 ).
Fig. 2

 Correlation between 3D-CoPs and ETS-intubation (scope manipulation and loop management). 3D-CoPS, 3D-Colonoscopy Progression Score. ETS, Endoscopy Training system.

Correlation between 3D-CoPs and ETS-intubation (scope manipulation and loop management). 3D-CoPS, 3D-Colonoscopy Progression Score. ETS, Endoscopy Training system.

Primary outcomes

The correlation analysis between 3D-CoPS and number of polyps found revealed a weak, insignificant correlation (0.16, P  = 0.297) ( Fig. 3 ). Likewise, a weak correlation was seen between ETS-intubation, and number of polyps found (0.15, P  = 0.322) ( Fig. 4 ).
Fig. 3

 Correlation between 3D-CoPS and number of polyps found during ETS task Mucosal Inspection. 3D-CoPS, 3D-Colonoscopy Progression Score. ETS, Endoscopy Training System.

Fig. 4

 Correlation between ETS-intubation (scope manipulation and loop management) and number of polyps found during the ETS task of mucosal inspection. ETS, Endoscopy Training System.

Correlation between 3D-CoPS and number of polyps found during ETS task Mucosal Inspection. 3D-CoPS, 3D-Colonoscopy Progression Score. ETS, Endoscopy Training System. Correlation between ETS-intubation (scope manipulation and loop management) and number of polyps found during the ETS task of mucosal inspection. ETS, Endoscopy Training System.

Secondary outcomes

No correlation was found between total colonoscopy experience and time spent during withdrawal or number of polyps found. The correlation between time spent during withdrawal and colonoscopies per year was weak to moderate, meaning that increasing experience meant decreasing time spent during mucosal inspection ( Table 3 ).

Bivariate correlation between 3D-CoPS, ETS-intubation (scope manipulation and loop management), number of polyps found, time spent inspecting mucosa, colonoscopies per year and total colonoscopy experience.

3D-CoPSETS-intubationNumber of polyps foundTime spent inspecting mucosaColonoscopies per yearTotal colonoscopy experience
3D-CoPSPearson Correlation1 .596 1 .157–.246 .581 1 .615 1
Sig. (2-tailed).000.297.100.000.000
N464646464646
ETS-intubationPearson Correlation1.149 –.382 1 .659 1 .493 1
Sig. (2-tailed).322.009.000.001
N4646464646
Number of polyps foundPearson Correlation1.207–.084.051
Sig. (2-tailed).168.581.736
N46464646
Time spent inspecting mucosaPearson Correlation1 –.302 2 –.185
Sig. (2-tailed).042.220
N464646
Colonoscopies per yearPearson Correlation1 .804 1
Sig. (2-tailed).000
N4646
Total colonoscopy experiencePearson Correlation1
Sig. (2-tailed)
N46

3D-CoPS, 3D-Colonoscopy Progression Score; ETS, Endoscopy Training system.

Correlation is significant at the 0.01 level (2-tailed).

Correlation is significant at the 0.05 level (2-tailed).

3D-CoPS, 3D-Colonoscopy Progression Score; ETS, Endoscopy Training system. Correlation is significant at the 0.01 level (2-tailed). Correlation is significant at the 0.05 level (2-tailed).

Discussion

Studies have linked cecal intubation rate with ADR; however, the direct association between technical performance during colonoscopy intubation and withdrawal has never been explored. Thus, it remains unclear whether intubation skills predict proficiency in the skills related to a better mucosal inspection, i. e. higher ADR. We used two different assessment tools for simulated colonoscopy (ETS-intubation and 3D-CoPS) to investigate the correlation between performance skills related to intubation and diagnostic accuracy based on number of polyps found. We found no correlation between intubation-related performance (based on 3D-CoPS and ETS-intubation) and number of polyps found during the task mucosal inspection. Nor was clinical experience associated with a higher polyp detection. Our findings are in line with previous studies investigating transfer of skills from one procedure to another 13 14 15 . These studies investigated two different procedures, but the colonoscopy procedure should also be considered as two separate procedures with two different technical approaches needed to succeed. Transfer of skills from simulation-based training to the clinic has shown improved outcomes in the early stages of training in the clinic 16 , but no one has investigated transfer of mucosal inspection techniques in a simulation-based setting and training the skills needed remain unclear 17 . In 2013 Ritter et al. published a study aimed at gathering evidence of validity of a non-virtual-reality assessment tool, which later was added as a new task and today is called ETS 11 18 . Results from these studies indicate that the experienced participants in our study had a lower score for mucosal inspection and found fewer polyps during withdrawal. A slightly different setup in the prior studies may be the reason for the differences. In task 5 (mucosal inspection) Ritter et al. describe the use of 10 to 20 polyps located throughout the rubber model, but in our study, the polyps were fixed to 10 polyps and location. Furthermore, in relation to aspects of polyp detection, the experience was not associated with finding more polyps. Real polyp recognition skills have revealed experienced-novice differences 19 . However, in the present study, all 10 polyps were identical and only the search component of polyp detection was tested. Hence, clinical experience with subtle features of polyps presented no specific advantage. Mucosal inspection time had a weak negative but significant correlation with colonoscopies per year and ETS-intubation score, meaning that participants who performed well on the ETS-intubation tasks spent less time on mucosal inspection. This is in line with a previous study investigating mucosal inspection technique in a simulation-based setting 20 . They found that clinically experienced endoscopists tended to visualize more of the mucosa and at a faster rate. In a clinical study investigating withdrawal technique among 11 endoscopists with varying ADR, they found no difference in time spent during withdrawal but higher withdrawal technique scores among endoscopists with a moderate to high ADR. They concluded that withdrawal techniques may be more important compared with withdrawal time in predicting ADRs 9 . Likewise, a multicenter randomized trial explored the effect of an improvement program on ADR and found increasing ADR but unchanged withdrawal time, indicating that a good inspection technique is imperative for a high ADR 10 . The difference in mucosal time spent during withdrawal could be explained by the results of a prospective study demonstrating that experts with the lowest ADR tended to have a slow withdrawal speed but failed to adequately examine the back of the colonic folds for potentially missed polyps. In contrast, an endoscopist with a high ADR was more apt to carefully “reinsert” the scope in missed areas and might explain the difference in time spent during withdrawal 21 . Most participants in our study spent less time than the recommended minimum withdrawal time in the clinic for patients without polyps (mean mucosal inspection time; 388 seconds (SD 126), clinical minimal recommendation; < 360 to 600 seconds) 4 7 . Reasons could be that some experts did not take the task of finding simulated polyps seriously enough due to lack of realism and consequences of missing a polyp. In two studies exploring performance in simulated mastoidectomy on a cadaveric and a virtual reality (VR) simulator, results demonstrated inappropriate behavior among experts concluding that simulator fidelity is a contributing factor 22 .

Strengths and limitations

It is important to acknowledge that results from a simulated environment can never be completely realistic. Endoscopy training simulators whether being physical or virtual all lack realism 23 . The Colonoscopy Training Model is a rubber model of the colon and for use, needs to be lubricated to decrease friction between the colonoscope and the rubber colon. Incorrectly applied lubrication to the rubber colon makes handling loops and passing flexures difficult due to friction. However, we used the ETS simulators with established evidence of validity and the standardized setup made comparisons easily feasible. When investigating correlation, the strength lies in the sample being heterogeneous, which was the case for the 23 participants (total colonoscopy experience: 0–10,000). We suspect the simplicity of the simulator (task 5, mucosal inspection) to be the reason for lack of correlation between technical intubation performance and mucosal inspection. It is well known that polyps may appear or disappear during withdrawal due to the high-rise folds and peristalsis. However, in our simulated setup, the rubber colon did not have peristaltic movements, hence providing the participant with a better view of the mucosa, which may lower the time-dependent effect during withdrawal. ETS tests multiple tasks and the simulator is a strong training and assessment tool, but the task of inspecting the mucosa needs further development to be of valid use. Polyp size, location, and morphology need more diversity for the simulator to differentiate between experts and novices in the skills of mucosal inspection. Moreover, studies have shown that assessing in multiple ways increases reliability and lowers bias, hence a version that includes different tasks or simulators may prove better for that purpose 24 . Currently, no transferability of mucosal inspection in simulation-based training has been explored. Testing transferability from simulation to the clinic poses a challenge because the current primary quality indicator is ADR, which requires a large number of procedures to be valid. Eliminating ADR as a quality factor requires an assessment tool closely correlated to ADR. A clinical study investigating the relationship between ADR and an assessment tool able to assess both in the simulation-based setup and the clinic, such as 3D-CoPS, may be the answer for predicting diagnostic accuracy.

Conclusions

In conclusion, we found no evidence to support that technical performance during intubation is correlated with mucosal inspection performance in a simulation-based setting. Clinical experience was correlated with less time spent on mucosal inspection, indicating higher efficiency in polyp detection but not in the number of polyps found. Our results indicate that more realistic simulators are needed for training and assessing competence in polyp detection.
  23 in total

1.  Simulated Colonoscopy Objective Performance Evaluation (SCOPE): a non-computer-based tool for assessment of endoscopic skills.

Authors:  E M Ritter; T C Cox; K D Trinca; J P Pearl
Journal:  Surg Endosc       Date:  2013-07-17       Impact factor: 4.584

2.  Does Robotic Surgical Simulator Performance Correlate With Surgical Skill?

Authors:  James T Mills; Helen Y Hougen; Daniel Bitner; Tracey L Krupski; Noah S Schenkman
Journal:  J Surg Educ       Date:  2017-06-13       Impact factor: 2.891

3.  Expert sampling of VR simulator metrics for automated assessment of mastoidectomy performance.

Authors:  Steven Arild Wuyts Andersen; Peter Trier Mikkelsen; Mads Sølvsten Sørensen
Journal:  Laryngoscope       Date:  2019-01-09       Impact factor: 3.325

4.  Randomized trial to examine procedure-to-procedure transfer in laparoscopic simulator training.

Authors:  F Bjerrum; J L Sorensen; L Konge; S Rosthøj; J Lindschou; B Ottesen; J Strandbygaard
Journal:  Br J Surg       Date:  2015-10-29       Impact factor: 6.939

5.  Colonoscopic withdrawal technique is associated with adenoma miss rates.

Authors:  D K Rex
Journal:  Gastrointest Endosc       Date:  2000-01       Impact factor: 9.427

6.  Effect of an endoscopic quality improvement program on adenoma detection rates: a multicenter cluster-randomized controlled trial in a clinical practice setting (EQUIP-3).

Authors:  Michael B Wallace; Julia E Crook; Colleen S Thomas; Estella Staggs; Laurie Parker; Douglas K Rex
Journal:  Gastrointest Endosc       Date:  2016-07-26       Impact factor: 9.427

7.  Is there inter-procedural transfer of skills in intraocular surgery? A randomized controlled trial.

Authors:  Ann Sofia Skou Thomsen; Jens Folke Kiilgaard; Morten la Cour; Ryan Brydges; Lars Konge
Journal:  Acta Ophthalmol       Date:  2017-03-30       Impact factor: 3.761

8.  Assessment of colorectal polyp recognition skill: development and validation of an objective test.

Authors:  Andrew Hill; Mark S Horswill; Annaliese M Plooy; Marcus O Watson; Lachlan N Rowlands; Guy M Wallis; Stephan Riek; Robin Burgess-Limerick; David G Hewett
Journal:  Surg Endosc       Date:  2016-09-20       Impact factor: 4.584

9.  Assessing colonoscopic inspection skill using a virtual withdrawal simulation: a preliminary validation of performance metrics.

Authors:  Christine M Zupanc; Guy M Wallis; Andrew Hill; Robin Burgess-Limerick; Stephan Riek; Annaliese M Plooy; Mark S Horswill; Marcus O Watson; Hans de Visser; David Conlan; David G Hewett
Journal:  BMC Med Educ       Date:  2017-07-12       Impact factor: 2.463

10.  Using computerized assessment in simulated colonoscopy: a validation study.

Authors:  Andreas Slot Vilmann; Christian Lachenmeier; Morten Bo Søndergaard Svendsen; Bo Søndergaard; Yoon Soo Park; Lars Bo Svendsen; Lars Konge
Journal:  Endosc Int Open       Date:  2020-05-25
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