Pituitary society expert Delphi consensus: operative workflow in endoscopic transsphenoidal pituitary adenoma resection
Author
Marcus, Hani JKhan, Danyal Z
Borg, Anouk
Buchfelder, Michael
Cetas, Justin S
Collins, Justin W
Dorward, Neil L
Fleseriu, Maria
Gurnell, Mark
Javadpour, Mohsen
Jones, Pamela S
Koh, Chan Hee
Layard Horsfall, Hugo
Mamelak, Adam N
Mortini, Pietro
Muirhead, William
Oyesiku, Nelson M
Schwartz, Theodore H
Sinha, Saurabh
Stoyanov, Danail
Syro, Luis V
Tsermoulas, Georgios
Williams, Adam
Winder, Mark J
Zada, Gabriel
Laws, Edward R
Affiliation
National Hospital for Neurology and Neurosurgery; University College London; John Radcliffe Hospital; University Hospital Erlangen; Oregon Health & Science University; University College London Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust; Cambridge University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust; University of Cambridge; Beaumont Hospital; Harvard Medical School; Cedars-Sinai Medical Center; San Raffaele University Health Institute Milan; University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; Weill Medical College of Cornell University; Royal Hallamshire Hospital & Sheffield Children's Hospital; Hospital Pablo Tobon Uribe and Clinica Medellin-Grupo Quirónsalud; Queen Elizabeth Hospital Birmingham; University of Birmingham; Southmead Hospital Bristol; St Vincent's Public and Private Hospitals; University of Southern California; Brigham and Women's HospitalPublication date
2021-07-06
Metadata
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Purpose: Surgical workflow analysis seeks to systematically break down operations into hierarchal components. It facilitates education, training, and understanding of surgical variations. There are known educational demands and variations in surgical practice in endoscopic transsphenoidal approaches to pituitary adenomas. Through an iterative consensus process, we generated a surgical workflow reflective of contemporary surgical practice. Methods: A mixed-methods consensus process composed of a literature review and iterative Delphi surveys was carried out within the Pituitary Society. Each round of the survey was repeated until data saturation and > 90% consensus was reached. Results: There was a 100% response rate and no attrition across both Delphi rounds. Eighteen international expert panel members participated. An extensive workflow of 4 phases (nasal, sphenoid, sellar and closure) and 40 steps, with associated technical errors and adverse events, were agreed upon by 100% of panel members across rounds. Both core and case-specific or surgeon-specific variations in operative steps were captured. Conclusions: Through an international expert panel consensus, a workflow for the performance of endoscopic transsphenoidal pituitary adenoma resection has been generated. This workflow captures a wide range of contemporary operative practice. The agreed "core" steps will serve as a foundation for education, training, assessment and technological development (e.g. models and simulators). The "optional" steps highlight areas of heterogeneity of practice that will benefit from further research (e.g. methods of skull base repair). Further adjustments could be made to increase applicability around the world.Citation
Marcus HJ, Khan DZ, Borg A, Buchfelder M, Cetas JS, Collins JW, Dorward NL, Fleseriu M, Gurnell M, Javadpour M, Jones PS, Koh CH, Layard Horsfall H, Mamelak AN, Mortini P, Muirhead W, Oyesiku NM, Schwartz TH, Sinha S, Stoyanov D, Syro LV, Tsermoulas G, Williams A, Winder MJ, Zada G, Laws ER. Pituitary society expert Delphi consensus: operative workflow in endoscopic transsphenoidal pituitary adenoma resection. Pituitary. 2021 Dec;24(6):839-853. doi: 10.1007/s11102-021-01162-3. Epub 2021 Jul 6.Type
ArticleAdditional Links
https://link.springer.com/journal/11102PMID
34231079Journal
PituitaryPublisher
Kluwer Academic Publishersae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.1007/s11102-021-01162-3