Optimising the Care and Treatment Pathways for Older Patients Facing Major Gastrointestinal Surgery.
NCT ID: NCT04545125
Last Updated: 2021-01-07
Study Results
The study team has not published outcome measurements, participant flow, or safety data for this trial yet. Check back later for updates.
Basic Information
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UNKNOWN
120 participants
OBSERVATIONAL
2020-08-18
2022-09-01
Brief Summary
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Deciding whether a person is fit enough to undergo a major operation is difficult and depends on patient factors (e.g. heart and lung fitness, other medical conditions, patient choice) and technical factors (location and spread of disease, availability of other options for treatment).
In the outpatient setting there are a number of tests that can be used to try to work out what the risks of a major operation will be for a particular person. These can then guide different approaches to try to lessen these risks. Examples include exercise programmes, dietary supplements and anxiety management programmes in the period before the operation. In the emergency setting there is often not sufficient time before their operation but there are still a number of ways of improving the chances of a good recovery, such as meeting with a physiotherapist and early planning for discharge needs.
This study aims to explore:
1. Whether patients who have poor outcomes after surgery can be identified at the start of their surgical journey
2. Whether there are specific patient characteristics that are associated with whether individual patients undergo major surgery or not.
3. What patients feel about different support measures that may be put in place to try to improve outcomes
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Detailed Description
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Major surgery remains one of the most debilitating events that an older person may experience and may profoundly influence functional decline and disability. Optimisation of outcomes in older patients with comorbidities and frailty requires multi-professional input which is often lacking. Adverse factors associated with ageing include co-morbidity, polypharmacy, cognitive impairment, dependency and frailty, all of which are associated with increased all cause mortality in the general population. There is also a natural decline in cardiorespiratory fitness with age, however this may be modifiable with physical activity or exercise. Malnutrition and psychological problems are also very common in patients requiring gastrointestinal surgery. When these at-risk individuals are exposed to the stress of major abdominal surgery, post-operative mortality and morbidity also increase. Common lifestyle choices, including smoking, excess alcohol consumption and sedentary behaviours, add to this risk.
Conditions
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Study Design
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COHORT
PROSPECTIVE
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
* Aged 65+ years old inclusive
* Patients with a diagnosis of gastrointestinal pathology amenable to elective, urgent (unscheduled) or emergency major gastrointestinal surgery who either undergo surgery, a risk-adapted procedure or are managed conservatively (due to patient wishes, co-morbidities or frailty).
* Mental capacity to consent
Exclusion Criteria
* Patients with unresectable disease (location, invasion, dissemination)
* Lack mental capacity to consent
* Unable to understand the information provided (translational issues)
* Prisoners
* Patients undergoing surgery for major trauma
* Patients undergoing surgery for primary gynaecological, vascular or urological disease
65 Years
ALL
No
Sponsors
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University of Sheffield
OTHER
Sheffield Hallam University
OTHER
Sheffield Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Principal Investigators
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Sarah Daniels
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
Sheffield Teaching Hospitals NHS FT
Locations
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Sheffield Teaching Hospitals NHS FT
Sheffield, Yorkshire, United Kingdom
Barnsley Hospital NHS FT
Barnsley, , United Kingdom
Countries
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Central Contacts
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Facility Contacts
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Michael Shanaghey
Role: primary
References
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Daniels SL, Lee MJ, Moug S, Wilson TR, Burton M, George J, Brown SR, Wyld L. Protocol for a multi-centre observational and mixed methods pilot study to identify factors predictive of poor functional recovery after major gastrointestinal surgery and strategies to enhance uptake of perioperative optimization: Optimizing the care and treatment pathways for older patients facing major gastrointestinal surgery (OCTAGON). Colorectal Dis. 2021 Jun;23(6):1552-1561. doi: 10.1111/codi.15603. Epub 2021 Mar 22.
Other Identifiers
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STH20694
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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