Intraoperative time out to promote the implementation of the critical view of safety in laparoscopic cholecystectomy: a video-based assessment of 343 procedures
Pietro Mascagni, Maria Rita Rodriguez-Luna, Takeshi Urade, Emanuele, Felli, Patrick Pessaux, Didier Mutter, Jacques Marescaux, Guido Costamagna,, Bernard Dallemagne, Nicolas Padoy

TL;DR
Implementing a brief intraoperative time out significantly increases the adoption of the critical view of safety in laparoscopic cholecystectomy, potentially reducing bile duct injury risk and improving surgical safety practices.
Contribution
This study demonstrates that a simple 5-second intraoperative time out effectively enhances CVS implementation during laparoscopic cholecystectomy.
Findings
CVS achievement rate increased from 15.9% to 44.1%.
Postoperative CVS reporting rose from 1.3% to 28.8%.
Morbidity remained unchanged.
Abstract
Background: The critical view of safety (CVS) is poorly adopted in surgical practices although it is ubiquitously recommended to prevent major bile duct injuries during laparoscopic cholecystectomy (LC). This study aims to determine whether performing a short intraoperative time out can improve CVS implementation. Methods: Surgeons performing LCs at an academic centre were invited to perform a 5-second long time out to verify CVS before dividing the cystic duct (5-second rule). The primary endpoint was to compare the rate of CVS achievement between LCs performed in the year before and the year after the 5-second rule. The CVS achievement rate was computed using the mediated video-based assessment of two independent reviewers. Clinical outcomes, LC workflows, and postoperative reports were also compared. Results: Three hundred and forty-three (171 before and 172 after the 5-second rule)…
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