Randomised trial on the economic impact of proficiency‐based progression vs conventional robotic surgical training
Stefano Puliatti, Natali Rodriguez Peñaranda, Marco Amato, Ruben De Groote, Rui Farinha, Brendan Bunting, Ben van Cleynenbreugel, Alexandre Mottrie, Anthony G. Gallagher

TL;DR
This study compares the costs of two robotic surgery training methods and finds that one becomes more cost-effective with more trainees.
Contribution
The study identifies scalability thresholds where proficiency-based training becomes more cost-effective than conventional methods.
Findings
PBP training was more expensive for small groups but became cost-effective beyond 25 trainees.
At 500 trainees, PBP training cost 110% less than conventional training.
All cost differences were statistically significant.
Abstract
To evaluate the cost‐effectiveness of proficiency‐based progression (PBP) training compared to conventional surgical training approaches, and to determine whether PBP training implementation is economically justified when scaled to large numbers of trainees. Economic analysis was performed using data from the prospective, randomised, and blinded Orsi Surgical Skills E‐learning Trial (OSSET; ClinicalTrials.gov identifier: NCT04541615) at ORSI Academy (Belgium), where 47 medical trainees without prior robotic surgery experience were randomised into four groups, each with progressively reduced adherence to the PBP methodology. All trainees completed simulation‐based training on a validated bladder‐urethra anastomosis model, ranging from full PBP training with metric‐based assessment and proficiency benchmarks (Group 1) to a traditional apprenticeship model (Group 4). The primary outcome…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSurgical Simulation and Training · Prostate Cancer Diagnosis and Treatment · Global Health and Surgery
