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China OLIMPICS: China Ophthalmic Learning and Improvement Initiative in Cataract Surgery Trial

Sun Yat-sen University logo

Sun Yat-sen University

Status

Completed

Conditions

Cataract

Treatments

Other: Simulation-based surgical training
Other: Standard surgical training

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT03458442
China OLIMPICS* Trial

Details and patient eligibility

About

This is a prospective, investigator-masked randomised controlled education-intervention trial of intense simulation-based surgical education plus conventional training versus a current six-week standard training course. The aim is to investigate whether the addition of simulation-based surgical education to standard training improves competence and surgical outcomes. All participants in the study will receive the educational intervention of the six-week Orbis-COS course. The intervention groups will receive this training and an additional element of learning and sustained deliberate practice using model eyes and simulation.

Full description

Project Description:

The leading cause of blindness in China and the world is un-operated cataract. Despite notable efforts on the part of the Chinese government, China's cataract surgical rate (1400/million/year in 2015) remains behind that of many of its poorer neighbours, such as India (6500) and Vietnam (2250). An important reason is the unavailability of trained surgeons: though China has over 36,000 ophthalmologists, only a third are capable of performing independent cataract surgery. This shortfall is due in large part to lack of hands-on training opportunities. A recent survey of residents at China's top-ranked resident training programs found that the median number of independent cataract surgeries performed was actually zero. The problem persists after formal training is completed: <5% of cataract surgeries are performed by doctors aged 24-43 years. The problem is particularly acute in rural areas, where hands-on training opportunities for young ophthalmic surgeons are even rarer. One reason is safety concerns on the part of patients and senior doctors in entrusting operations to young surgeons.

New training models for cataract surgery are needed which can safely and efficiently support trainees during the transition from novice to competent surgeon. Simulation-based surgical training, using high-fidelity, inexpensive, re-usable model eyes have been successfully piloted. The investigators now propose to carry out a randomized trial comparing training using these model eyes with traditional techniques, to study the impact on quality of surgery (assessed by masked grading of videos using the ICO OSCAR system), visual acuity and cost-utility outcomes.

The investigators research will reduce expenses by piggybacking on an on-going collaborative program between Orbis International, the Chinese MOH, Chinese National Blindness Prevention Committee and Tongren Hosptal (one of China's largest and best-respected eye hospitals), which will train 120 rural cataract surgeons at 60 county hospitals in 6 provinces. The study's collaboration involves internationally-respected vision research teams at ICEH, Queen's University Belfast and Tongren, while offering opportunities for scale-up and engagement with Chinese policy makers at the highest level.

A successful trial proving the training benefits of inexpensive model eyes will make a unique contribution to building the capacity to manage China's leading cause of blindness, thus furthering the aims of SightFirst and the Chinese Ministry of Health, while improving the lives of Chinese people dwelling in low-resource areas.

Enrollment

32 patients

Sex

All

Ages

Under 100 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Surgeon Inclusion Criteria:

    • <20 complete SICS cases performed lifetime
    • Completed ophthalmic training or in residency training with license to perform surgery
    • Will have opportunity to carry out independent SICS surgery after training
  • Patient Enrolment Criteria:

    • Cataract in one or both eyes felt to be visually significant in the opinion of the operating ophthalmologist.

Exclusion criteria

  • Surgeon Exclusion Criteria:

    • Already capable of performing independent intra-ocular surgery of any kind
    • No opportunity to perform cataract surgery after training.
  • Patient Exclusion Criteria:

    • Fellow eye has an irreversible cause of visual impairment
    • Any prior ophthalmic surgery in the proposed operative eye
    • Any co-morbid condition in the operative eye likely to impact post-operative visual acuity negatively (conditions only detected on post-operative examination would also lead to retrospective exclusion.)

Trial design

Primary purpose

Health Services Research

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

32 participants in 2 patient groups

Intervention Arm
Experimental group
Description:
Standard surgical training + simulation-based surgical training
Treatment:
Other: Simulation-based surgical training
Other: Standard surgical training
Control Arm
Active Comparator group
Description:
Standard surgical training
Treatment:
Other: Standard surgical training

Trial documents
1

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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