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Clinical Trials/NCT03848975
NCT03848975
Unknown
Not Applicable

Impact of Simulation Training on the Success Rate of External Cephalic Version and Vacuum Assisted Delivery in Clinical Practice. A Randomized Controlled Trial.

University Hospital, Geneva1 site in 1 country68 target enrollmentAugust 28, 2018

Overview

Phase
Not Applicable
Intervention
Not specified
Conditions
Simulation Training
Sponsor
University Hospital, Geneva
Enrollment
68
Locations
1
Primary Endpoint
Success rate of the ECV in the participant clinical practice
Last Updated
4 years ago

Overview

Brief Summary

The main objective of the study is to evaluate the benefit of simulator training for learning external cephalic version (ECV) or vacuum assisted vaginal delivery (hereafter vacuum extraction [VE]) for obstetrics-gynecology residents.

The primary outcome of this randomized control trial is to evaluate the impact of simulation training on the success of ECV and VE.

Detailed Description

Usually, the training of obstetrical maneuvers are done "one the job" according to the situations encountered in the clinical practice during postgraduate training. This has some disadvantages like inequality of exposure to these situations, inadequate learning environment (emergencies, impossibility to repeat the maneuver, etc.) and risk complications related to the learner'slack of experience. To evaluate the benefit for learning external cephalic version (ECV) or vacuum assisted vaginal delivery (hereafter vacuum extraction \[VE\]), the investigators are conducting a randomized control trial composed by two parallel studies. Each group will represent the control group in relation to the maneuver to which it will not be trained. The objectives of the first one is to evaluate the impact of simulation training on the success of ECV, the complication rate, as well as the patient's and learner's satisfaction. The objectives of the second one is to evaluate the impact of simulation training on the success of VE, the complication rate, as well as the patient's and learner's satisfaction. The overall goal is to evaluate the effects on clinically relevant outcomes of the teaching by simulation in obstetrics. If simulation training improves the success rate of these maneuvers and the satisfaction of the patient and the learner, simulation learning will be included in a formal and systematic way during postgraduate training in obstetrics. The subjects are the resident doctors or consultants who have had no or few prior simulation training (maximum 1 session) and little clinical experience of the maneuver evaluated (maximum of 19 of each maneuver).

Registry
clinicaltrials.gov
Start Date
August 28, 2018
End Date
November 1, 2022
Last Updated
4 years ago
Study Type
Interventional
Study Design
Parallel
Sex
All

Investigators

Responsible Party
Principal Investigator
Principal Investigator

Nicole Jastrow Meyer

Principal investigator

University Hospital, Geneva

Eligibility Criteria

Inclusion Criteria

  • Being a resident or consultant working in the gynecology and obstetrics department of the hospital
  • Agreeing to participate in the study by signing an informed consent form

Exclusion Criteria

  • Having performed several ECV or VE simulation training (more than 1 session each) before the recruitment
  • Having already performed more than 20 ECV and more than 20 VE during clinical practice before recruitment.
  • Having a planned clinical activity in the delivery room which does not allow to perform at least 1 ECV or 1 VE during the study period.

Outcomes

Primary Outcomes

Success rate of the ECV in the participant clinical practice

Time Frame: 6 months

The success of the procedure is defined as the passage of the fetus from a breech ou transverse presentation to a cephalic presentation, immediately confirmed by ultrasound, after a maximum of 2 trials. The outcomes for each procedure (success or not) will be judged at the end of the procedure

Success rate of the VE in the participant clinical practice

Time Frame: 6 months

The success rate of the procedure is defined as birth after vacuum-assisted delivery without release of the Kiwi cup. The cup's release is considered when total and involuntary loss of vacuum occurs, resulting in a loss of contact with the head. If the patient gives birth spontaneously after a vacuum release or if there is a change of instrumentation (following a release or not), it is a failure in the context of this study. The outcomes for each procedure (success or not) will be judge at the end of the procedure

Secondary Outcomes

  • Participant satisfaction after the ECV on numeric rating scale(6 months)
  • Rate of complication (ECV)(6 months)
  • Rate of emergency cesarean section (ECV)(6 months)
  • Reason for stopping VE(6 months)
  • Number of pull for VE(6 months)
  • Maternal satisfaction after the VE on numeric rating scale(6 months)
  • Participant satisfaction after the VE on numeric rating scale(6 months)
  • Rate of complication (VE)(6 months)
  • Rate emergency cesarean section rate (VE)(6 months)
  • Reason for stopping ECV(6 months)
  • Maximum pain during ECV on numeric rating scale(6 months)
  • Maternal satisfaction after the ECV on numeric rating scale(6 months)

Study Sites (1)

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