Simulation-based assessment of flexible ureterorenoscopy skills found that only 47.7% of participants were deemed entrustable by experts, with a benchmark pass rate of 56.9%.
Cross-Sectional (n=44)
Single-blind
Simulation-based assessment revealed that only about 60% of graduating urology residents were rated as entrustable for flexible ureterorenoscopy, highlighting the need for benchmark-based remediation.
Objective: To objectively assess the performance of graduating urology residents performing flexible ureterorenoscopy (fURS) using a simulation-based model and to set an entrustability standard or benchmark for use across the educational spectrum. Methods: Chief urology residents and attending endourologists performed a standardized fURS task (ureterorenoscopy and repositioning of stones) using a Boston Scientific © Lithovue ureteroscope on a Cook Medical © URS model. All performances were video-recorded and blindly scored by both endourology experts and crowd-workers (C-SATS) using the Ureteroscopic Global Rating Scale, plus an overall entrustability score. Validity evidence supporting the scores was collected and categorized. The Borderline Group (BG) method was used to set absolute performance standards for the expert and crowdsourced ratings. Results: A total of 44 participants (40 chief residents, 4 faculties) completed testing. Eighty-three percent of participants had performed >50 fURS cases at the time of the study. Only 47.7% (mean score 12.6/20) and 61.4% (mean score 12.4/20) of participants were deemed “entrustable” by experts and crowd-workers, respectively. The BG method produced entrustability benchmarks of 11.8/20 for experts and 11.4/20 for crowd-worker ratings, resulting in pass rates of 56.9% and 61.4%. Conclusion: Using absolute standard setting methods, benchmark scores were set to identify trainees who could safely carry out fURS in the simulated setting. Only 60% of residents in our cohort were rated as entrustable. These findings support the use of benchmarks to earlier identify trainees requiring remediation.
Goldenberg et al. (Sat,) conducted a cross-sectional in Urology training (n=44). Simulation-based flexible ureterorenoscopy (fURS) task was evaluated on Entrustability score and pass rates using the Ureteroscopic Global Rating Scale. Simulation-based assessment of flexible ureterorenoscopy skills found that only 47.7% of participants were deemed entrustable by experts, with a benchmark pass rate of 56.9%.
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