Technical success is a procedural term used to describe whether a medical or surgical technique was performed as intended, without intraoperative failure or deviation from the planned intervention.

Technical success refers to the completion of a planned medical or surgical procedure according to predefined technical criteria, without intra-procedural complications or deviations.
  • Deployment of a stent in the intended anatomical location
  • Successful embolization of a target vessel without device migration
  • Completion of a tumor resection with intraoperative goals met

The term is often misused to overstate clinical value, especially in studies lacking follow-up or outcome data. Common issues include:

  • Equating technical success with clinical efficacy
  • Using vague or post hoc definitions (e.g., “achieving the desired outcome”)
  • Ignoring patient-centered endpoints (e.g., survival, function, recurrence)
A procedure may be “technically successful” but clinically irrelevant or even harmful if it does not improve patient outcomes or if long-term complications are ignored.
  • Clinical success
  • Procedural efficacy
  • Outcome-based endpoints
  • Surrogate markers
  • Unjustified enthusiasm
  • technical_success.txt
  • Last modified: 2025/06/18 07:49
  • by administrador