Is the clinician an independent variable in embryo transfer outcomes under standardized direct and indirect supervision? A 5-year observational cohort study

Objective: To compare the cumulative pregnancy rate (CPR) for experienced clinicians and trainees naive to the skill of embryo transfer (ET) during an assisted reproductive treatment (ART) cycle. To establish the minimum number of procedures required to achieve consistent outcomes.Method: A non-inte...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Mittal, Monica, Supramaniam, Prasanna Raj, Lim, Lee Nai, Hamoda, Haitham, Savvas, Mike, Narvekar, Nitish
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: German Medical Science GMS Publishing House 2019-02-01
Series:GMS Journal for Medical Education
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.egms.de/static/en/journals/zma/2019-36/zma001215.shtml
id doaj-927a6bede4884df69f47097adee41f38
record_format Article
spelling doaj-927a6bede4884df69f47097adee41f382020-11-25T03:13:30ZdeuGerman Medical Science GMS Publishing HouseGMS Journal for Medical Education2366-50172019-02-01361Doc710.3205/zma001215Is the clinician an independent variable in embryo transfer outcomes under standardized direct and indirect supervision? A 5-year observational cohort studyMittal, Monica0Supramaniam, Prasanna Raj1Lim, Lee Nai2Hamoda, Haitham3Savvas, Mike4Narvekar, Nitish5Oxford University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, John Radcliffe Hospital, Oxford, UKOxford University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, John Radcliffe Hospital, Oxford, UKOxford University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, John Radcliffe Hospital, Oxford, UKKing’s College Hospital NHS Foundation Trust, Denmark Hill, Brixton, UKKing’s College Hospital NHS Foundation Trust, Denmark Hill, Brixton, UKKing’s College Hospital NHS Foundation Trust, Denmark Hill, Brixton, UKObjective: To compare the cumulative pregnancy rate (CPR) for experienced clinicians and trainees naive to the skill of embryo transfer (ET) during an assisted reproductive treatment (ART) cycle. To establish the minimum number of procedures required to achieve consistent outcomes.Method: A non-interventional retrospective observational cohort study looking at all consecutive ETs undertaken over a 5-year study period. The CPR was determined by a self-reported urinary home pregnancy test undertaken 16 days after oocyte retrieval.Results: The CPR did not differ between an experienced clinician (39%) and trainee (45%) for the first 50 (p=0.41) and last 50 (40.7% versus 42.7%) (p=0.81) ET procedures. The CPR for the individuals remained consistent with their peaks and troughs mirroring the overall success rate of the unit. This pattern continued when the data was further stratified for co-variables (age [≤37 years of age], catheter type [soft] and embryo quality [expanded blastocyst of grade ≥2]): CPRs for experienced clinicians was 65.7% (first 50 transfers) and 40.9% (last 50 transfers); CPR for trainees was 66.7% (first 50 transfers) and 53.6% (last 50 transfers); p=0.95 and p=0.37, respectively. The trainees, however, were more likely to use a stylet catheter with a 2-step transfer technique, with a cost over clinical implication. Furthermore, patients expressed a preference for an experienced clinician to perform their procedure, despite being informed that the grade of the clinician had no impact on the cycle outcome after an analysis of the unit’s data.Conclusion: The clinician's grade and duration of service have not been shown to significantly impact the outcome of the ART cycle. The findings, however, should be interpreted with caution, as they reflect the culture of training in the unit, where there is a strong emphasis on adequate direct and indirect supervision. Furthermore, the relationship between the volume of work and outcomes is established in postgraduate medical education, with the exact number required to achieve clinical competence being dependent on the procedure and intensity of the workload.http://www.egms.de/static/en/journals/zma/2019-36/zma001215.shtmlembryo transferlearning curvesassisted reproductive treatmentlearning theoriespregnancy rates
collection DOAJ
language deu
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Mittal, Monica
Supramaniam, Prasanna Raj
Lim, Lee Nai
Hamoda, Haitham
Savvas, Mike
Narvekar, Nitish
spellingShingle Mittal, Monica
Supramaniam, Prasanna Raj
Lim, Lee Nai
Hamoda, Haitham
Savvas, Mike
Narvekar, Nitish
Is the clinician an independent variable in embryo transfer outcomes under standardized direct and indirect supervision? A 5-year observational cohort study
GMS Journal for Medical Education
embryo transfer
learning curves
assisted reproductive treatment
learning theories
pregnancy rates
author_facet Mittal, Monica
Supramaniam, Prasanna Raj
Lim, Lee Nai
Hamoda, Haitham
Savvas, Mike
Narvekar, Nitish
author_sort Mittal, Monica
title Is the clinician an independent variable in embryo transfer outcomes under standardized direct and indirect supervision? A 5-year observational cohort study
title_short Is the clinician an independent variable in embryo transfer outcomes under standardized direct and indirect supervision? A 5-year observational cohort study
title_full Is the clinician an independent variable in embryo transfer outcomes under standardized direct and indirect supervision? A 5-year observational cohort study
title_fullStr Is the clinician an independent variable in embryo transfer outcomes under standardized direct and indirect supervision? A 5-year observational cohort study
title_full_unstemmed Is the clinician an independent variable in embryo transfer outcomes under standardized direct and indirect supervision? A 5-year observational cohort study
title_sort is the clinician an independent variable in embryo transfer outcomes under standardized direct and indirect supervision? a 5-year observational cohort study
publisher German Medical Science GMS Publishing House
series GMS Journal for Medical Education
issn 2366-5017
publishDate 2019-02-01
description Objective: To compare the cumulative pregnancy rate (CPR) for experienced clinicians and trainees naive to the skill of embryo transfer (ET) during an assisted reproductive treatment (ART) cycle. To establish the minimum number of procedures required to achieve consistent outcomes.Method: A non-interventional retrospective observational cohort study looking at all consecutive ETs undertaken over a 5-year study period. The CPR was determined by a self-reported urinary home pregnancy test undertaken 16 days after oocyte retrieval.Results: The CPR did not differ between an experienced clinician (39%) and trainee (45%) for the first 50 (p=0.41) and last 50 (40.7% versus 42.7%) (p=0.81) ET procedures. The CPR for the individuals remained consistent with their peaks and troughs mirroring the overall success rate of the unit. This pattern continued when the data was further stratified for co-variables (age [≤37 years of age], catheter type [soft] and embryo quality [expanded blastocyst of grade ≥2]): CPRs for experienced clinicians was 65.7% (first 50 transfers) and 40.9% (last 50 transfers); CPR for trainees was 66.7% (first 50 transfers) and 53.6% (last 50 transfers); p=0.95 and p=0.37, respectively. The trainees, however, were more likely to use a stylet catheter with a 2-step transfer technique, with a cost over clinical implication. Furthermore, patients expressed a preference for an experienced clinician to perform their procedure, despite being informed that the grade of the clinician had no impact on the cycle outcome after an analysis of the unit’s data.Conclusion: The clinician's grade and duration of service have not been shown to significantly impact the outcome of the ART cycle. The findings, however, should be interpreted with caution, as they reflect the culture of training in the unit, where there is a strong emphasis on adequate direct and indirect supervision. Furthermore, the relationship between the volume of work and outcomes is established in postgraduate medical education, with the exact number required to achieve clinical competence being dependent on the procedure and intensity of the workload.
topic embryo transfer
learning curves
assisted reproductive treatment
learning theories
pregnancy rates
url http://www.egms.de/static/en/journals/zma/2019-36/zma001215.shtml
work_keys_str_mv AT mittalmonica isthecliniciananindependentvariableinembryotransferoutcomesunderstandardizeddirectandindirectsupervisiona5yearobservationalcohortstudy
AT supramaniamprasannaraj isthecliniciananindependentvariableinembryotransferoutcomesunderstandardizeddirectandindirectsupervisiona5yearobservationalcohortstudy
AT limleenai isthecliniciananindependentvariableinembryotransferoutcomesunderstandardizeddirectandindirectsupervisiona5yearobservationalcohortstudy
AT hamodahaitham isthecliniciananindependentvariableinembryotransferoutcomesunderstandardizeddirectandindirectsupervisiona5yearobservationalcohortstudy
AT savvasmike isthecliniciananindependentvariableinembryotransferoutcomesunderstandardizeddirectandindirectsupervisiona5yearobservationalcohortstudy
AT narvekarnitish isthecliniciananindependentvariableinembryotransferoutcomesunderstandardizeddirectandindirectsupervisiona5yearobservationalcohortstudy
_version_ 1724646579158122496