Making Patients Fit for Surgery
Autor: | Suzanne van Kempen, Rudi M. H. Roumen, Sandra Beijer, Charlotte J L Molenaar, Stefanus J van Rooijen, Goof Schep, Nicole E. Papen-Botterhuis, Gerrit D. Slooter, Nicky Rademakers, Rianne van Lieshout, Rosalie Dubbers, Francesco Carli |
---|---|
Rok vydání: | 2019 |
Předmět: |
Male
030506 rehabilitation medicine.medical_specialty Colorectal cancer Prehabilitation Treatment outcome MEDLINE Physical Therapy Sports Therapy and Rehabilitation 03 medical and health sciences 0302 clinical medicine Quality of life Preoperative Care medicine Humans Postoperative Period Enhanced recovery after surgery Aged Aged 80 and over business.industry Rehabilitation Pillar Middle Aged Physical Functional Performance medicine.disease Combined Modality Therapy Surgery Clinical trial Treatment Outcome Quality of Life Feasibility Studies Female Colorectal Neoplasms Enhanced Recovery After Surgery 0305 other medical science business 030217 neurology & neurosurgery |
Zdroj: | American Journal of Physical Medicine & Rehabilitation. 98:888-896 |
ISSN: | 1537-7385 0894-9115 |
DOI: | 10.1097/phm.0000000000001221 |
Popis: | Considering the relation between preoperative functional capacity and postoperative complications, enhancing patients' functional capacity before surgery with a prehabilitation program may facilitate faster recovery and improve quality of life. However, time before surgery is short, mandating a multimodal and high-intensity training approach. This study investigated feasibility and safety of a prehabilitation program for colorectal cancer.Multimodal prehabilitation was offered to patients eligible for participation and they were assigned to an intervention or control group by program availability. The prehabilitation program consisted of the following four interventions: in-hospital high-intensity endurance and strength training, high-protein nutrition and supplements, smoking cessation, and psychological support. Program attendance, patient satisfaction, adverse events, and functional capacity were determined.Fifty patients participated in this study (prehabilitation 20, control 30). Program evaluation revealed a high (90%) attendance rate and high level of patient satisfaction. No adverse events occurred. Endurance and/or strength were improved. Eighty-six percent of patients with prehabilitation recovered to their baseline functional capacity 4 weeks postoperatively, 40% in the control group (P0.01).Multimodal prehabilitation including high-intensity training for colorectal cancer patients is feasible, safe, and effective. A randomized controlled trial (NTR5947) was initiated to determine whether prehabilitation may lower morbidity and mortality rates in colorectal surgery. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
Externí odkaz: |