The introduction of laparoscopic surgery two decades ago revolutionized general surgery by minimizing abdominal wall incisions. Other new minimally invasive surgical techniques seek to further limit the trauma to the abdominal wall by reducing the number of or eliminating incisions on the abdominal wall. It is unclear whether these new techniques have any advantages over traditional laparoscopy. Validated, standardized comparison methods of one minimally invasive procedure with another are missing. For minimally invasive procedures, complication rates are low, and traditional, physician reported outcomes such as morbidity and survival are not useful. Biomarker investigations, such as serum cytokines, have been inconsistent. Comparisons with clinical outcomes are missing. Thus, there is a lack of valid tools to assess outcomes for benign disease in the minimally invasive surgery realm. In other fields, patient-reported outcome measures, such as pain and fatigue, have been demonstrated to be key vital signs in comparing treatment efficacy. Advances in standardization and psychometric integrity such as the NIH supported Patient-Reported Outcomes Measures Information System (PROMIS), have facilitated these comparisons. Patient-reported outcomes have outperformed physician-reported outcomes for predicting survival and toxicity from treatment in clinical trials. Additionally, patient-reported outcome changes appear to be correlated with biologic and physiologic system changes. We propose to apply patient-reported outcome measures for the efficient, consistent, and well-validated comparison of novel minimally invasive surgical procedures with standard of care procedures. A randomized blinded study of the new single-port and the standard four-port laparoscopic cholecystectomy (a procedure performed for more than 750,000 patients/year) will serve as the model to evaluate the comparative effectiveness of minimally invasive surgical approaches. The global health short form questionnaire, longitudinal analog self assessment and pain scales will serve as outcome measures. In addition, we will obtain data on perioperative biochemical and physiologic biomarkers such as serum levels of inflammatory cytokines and heart rate variability. This will serve as pilot data for future investigations into he relationship of biomarkers and patient reported outcomes in minimally invasive surgery for benign disease.

Public Health Relevance

New minimally invasive surgical treatments are often outpatient procedures with low complication rates, promising fast recovery. The traditional physician-reported outcomes such as complication rates, blood loss, and hospital stay are not useful to guide treatment recommendations for one or the other minimally invasive procedure. This study aims to apply patient-reported outcomes developed within the NIH framework for cancer research and chronic disease treatment to the comparative effectiveness research in minimally invasive procedures for benign disease.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases (NIDDK)
Type
Mentored Patient-Oriented Research Career Development Award (K23)
Project #
5K23DK093553-02
Application #
8521285
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZDK1-GRB-2 (M2))
Program Officer
Podskalny, Judith M,
Project Start
2012-08-03
Project End
2015-07-31
Budget Start
2013-08-01
Budget End
2014-07-31
Support Year
2
Fiscal Year
2013
Total Cost
$148,835
Indirect Cost
$11,025
Name
Mayo Clinic, Rochester
Department
Type
DUNS #
006471700
City
Rochester
State
MN
Country
United States
Zip Code
55905
Abdelhamid, Mohamed O; Thiels, Cornelius A; Bingener, Juliane (2018) Is functional gallbladder disease truly increasing? Results from the Rochester Epidemiology Project. Am J Surg 216:932-934
Schmitt, Jennifer J; Carranza Leon, Daniel A; Occhino, John A et al. (2017) Determining Optimal Route of Hysterectomy for Benign Indications: Clinical Decision Tree Algorithm. Obstet Gynecol 129:130-138
Nickerson, Terry P; Aho, Johnathon M; Bingener, Juliane (2016) Single-incision laparoscopic resection of small bowel tumours: Making it easier for patient and surgeon. J Minim Access Surg 12:235-9
Abdelrahman, Amro M; Bingener, Juliane; Yu, Denny et al. (2016) Impact of single-incision laparoscopic cholecystectomy (SILC) versus conventional laparoscopic cholecystectomy (CLC) procedures on surgeon stress and workload: a randomized controlled trial. Surg Endosc 30:1205-11
Yu, Denny; Lowndes, Bethany; Morrow, Missy et al. (2016) Impact of novel shift handle laparoscopic tool on wrist ergonomics and task performance. Surg Endosc 30:3480-90
Leonard, Jennifer; Hieken, Tina J; Hussein, Malek et al. (2016) Delineation of factors associated with prolonged length of stay after laparoscopic ventral hernia repair leads to a clinical pathway and improves quality of care. Surg Endosc 30:1614-8
Yu, Denny; Lowndes, Bethany; Thiels, Cornelius et al. (2016) Quantifying Intraoperative Workloads Across the Surgical Team Roles: Room for Better Balance? World J Surg 40:1565-74
Aho, Johnathon M; Ruparel, Raaj K; Graham, Elaina et al. (2015) Mentor-guided self-directed learning affects resident practice. J Surg Educ 72:674-9
Søreide, Kjetil; Thorsen, Kenneth; Harrison, Ewen M et al. (2015) Perforated peptic ulcer. Lancet 386:1288-1298
Thiels, Cornelius A; Lal, Tarun Mohan; Nienow, Joseph M et al. (2015) Surgical never events and contributing human factors. Surgery 158:515-21

Showing the most recent 10 out of 22 publications