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2011-The Reporting of Complications - 20 Downloads

THE REPORTING OF COMPLICATIONS RELATED TO SURGICAL DEVICES

David Rew

Introduction

ASGBI is committed to the promotion of the practice of safe surgery. The Association has strongly supported the development and promotion of the Confidential Reporting System for Surgery, CORESS; and it held a Patient Safety Consensus Conference in October 2009, the proceedings of which were published as a Consensus Statement in April 2010 [1].

Safe Surgical Practice covers a whole range of issues and risks, including those relating to the use and implantation of surgical devices. There have been growing anecdotal concerns about complications and adverse outcomes with a range of different surgical devices and implantables. Following a discussion at ASGBI Council in early 2010, I was asked to undertake a review of reporting systems and to propose a way in which the ASGBI could be more proactive in addressing issues around the reporting of risks arising from the use and misuse of surgical devices.

The traditional route to reporting has been the published paper and case report. For many reasons, this does not provide a satisfactory reporting system where it can take individual Units years to accumulate insight into particular risks, and where the chances both of publication and of being read by the target audience are hit and miss.

It was apparent that the most appropriate way forward was in partnership with the Medicines and Healthcare (products) Regulatory Agency, the MHRA (www.mhra.gov.uk). The MHRA is a well resourced and statutory body of the Department of Health, tasked with the administration of the safety of Surgical Devices. A working partnership was forged with the senior team at the MHRA, under the direction of Dr Susanne Ludgate, and a web link was set up between the ASGBI and the MHRA websites to encourage the reporting of device related problems on the MHRA system.

This process resulted in a symposium at the Association's 2011 International Surgical Congress in Bournemouth, which was chaired by Frank Smith, Programme Director of CORESS. This session included a presentation by Professor Bruce Campbell, Chair of the NICE Advisory Committee on Interventional Procedures, and my own talk on the progress of our work with the MHRA in respect of surgical device safety. The difficulty in getting surgeons to report their observations was perceived as a particular challenge.

Somewhat presciently, this Symposium predated by a few days a well written and hard hitting Channel 4 Dispatches documentary on the shortcomings of surgical device safety and regulation. This was linked to the May 21st 2011 issue of the British Medical Journal (volume 342), containing a range of articles on the same topics, as referenced below [2 to 10].

The focus of the TV programme and the BMJ articles was upon metal-on metal total hip replacements, implantable defibrillators and cochlear implants, but the underlying issues were highly relevant to general and vascular surgery and to the interests of ASGBI members. Complacency on these issues is no longer an option, and we wish to move forwards as quickly as possible to find practical solutions.