Multidisciplinary Prehabilitation to Improve Frailty and Functional Capacity in High-risk Elective Surgical Patients: a Retrospective Pilot Study
NCT ID: NCT05668221
Last Updated: 2023-05-31
Study Results
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Basic Information
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COMPLETED
55 participants
OBSERVATIONAL
2020-11-01
2021-12-31
Brief Summary
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Detailed Description
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Prehabilitation is a multidisciplinary and multimodal approach involving anaesthesiologists, physicians, physiotherapists, occupational therapists and dietitians that aims to optimize functional capacity, nutritional status and emotional resilience before surgery, so as to enable the patients to better withstand perioperative stress. It encompass individualized aerobic and resistance training to enhance cardiopulmonary fitness, dietary interventions to counteract the catabolic state of surgery, emotional support to improve resilience and advice on behavioural changes such as cessation of smoking and alcohol abuse. In the literature, prehabilitation has well been reported to enhance functional capacity before and after surgery. In particular, exercise training has been shown to improve various aspects of physical function of the frail elderly (eg. muscle strength, body composition, mobility, functional status and fall prevention). Tailored exercise training is therefore expected to improve physical fitness and increase functional capacity so that patients can better withstand the stress of surgery. In a systematic review, prehabilitation before orthopaedic surgery have beneficial effects in improving strength, flexibility, balance and speed in 5 out of 7 randomized controlled trials. Regarding postoperative clinical outcomes such as length of stay, readmission rate and postoperative complications rate, evidence demonstrated an association between physical fitness improvement and a lower rate and severity of complications. Despite the heterogenicity in study design and modalities of prehabilitation program, the positive effect of prehabilitation on perioperative functional fitness has been shown across a wide variety of surgical procedures, including abdominal aortic aneurysm repair, esophagectomy, cystectomy, liver resection and colorectal surgery. In general, individuals who have been frail and having a sedentary activity level would benefit the most from prehabilitation program. Preoperative malnutrition can be due to inadequate intake and high requirements from the disease process that results in reduced body mass, strength and function and a reduced ability to mount an immunological defense. All these can be significant in the high catabolic state perioperatively for the healing process and the systemic inflammatory response to surgery. Preoperative malnutrition is associated with many adverse outcomes. After adjusting for active smoking status, preoperative malnutrition was associated with postoperative complications after pneumonectomy and hepatectomy, a longer length of stay in hospital, higher readmissions within 28 days and a higher mortality up to 90 days after surgery. Nutritional prehabilitation therefore helps prepare and optimize the patients' nutritional status for surgery and recovery.
The timing and duration of prehabilitation program can affect the risk of postoperative outcomes. An ideal duration of prehabilitation has not been established and there is a large heterogenicity in duration from the literature. But in general, a minimum of three to four weeks is required to have an effect of physical fitness. Despite the need for novel resources, economic evaluation suggested that prehabilitation could be a cost-effective approach, the resulting benefits in short- and medium-term outcomes offset the costs of additional resources.
Most of the "fast-track" surgical pathways focus on intraoperative and postoperative measures to enhance recovery, and the traditional rehabilitation approach is to operate first and then intervene. However, postoperative pain, fatigue and wound care impede the efficiency of rehabilitation measures such as physiotherapy and nutritional program. Therefore, it would be more ideal to start intervention before surgery while patients can be more actively engaged in the process of perioperative care and functional improvement. The earlier the patients can be engaged, the greater the likelihood of having a meaningful impact and the less likely to affect the surgical schedule. The waiting time for surgery creates a window of opportunity to prepare the patients for prehabilitation by addressing problems of physical fitness, nutritional status and emotional distress. By re-engineering our preoperative assessment clinic and integration within the prehabilitation clinic, we are more able to risk stratify and identify high-risk patients at the time of preoperative evaluation. A common and one-stop platform can be shared by a multidisciplinary perioperative team with seamless communications, which reduces the chance of high-risk patients being bounced between independent consultations.
Changing the present structure and logistics of preoperative assessment clinic requires active participation of the stakeholders involved in perioperative care. Surgeons need to refer patients to anaesthesiologists as early as possible for further screening into prehabilitation program. Anaesthesiologists need to have new assessment strategies for functional capacity that are not traditionally used in routine preoperative assessment clinic. Physiotherapist, occupational therapist and dietitians should ideally set up a one-stop service model to minimize patient travel. Effective implementation requires buy-in from hospital administrators, investing resources to support this value-based approach. Therefore, the investigators will conduct a pilot retrospective observational study to evaluate the feasibility and impact of prehabilitation on our study participants before major elective surgery. In particular, for the feasibility part, the investigators aim to (1) estimate recruitment, attrition and adherence rate, and (2) ensure safety of prehabilitation. For the pilot part, the investigators aim to identify if there are any changes on the outcomes after the prehabilitation intervention, and (2) identify estimates of variance for sample size calculation for future randomized trials.
Conditions
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Study Design
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COHORT
PROSPECTIVE
Interventions
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Prehabilitation
Prehabilitation includes exercise prescription, cognitive function assessment and training, nutritional optimisation at least 4 weeks prior to surgery
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
* Patient-specific: age 50 or above, undergoing elective major procedures, together with one of the followings:
1. American Society of Anaesthesiologists physical status score \>=3
2. Pre-frail to moderately frail patients with a Clinical Frailty Scale 3-6 at the time of assessment at prehabilitation clinic
3. 6-minute walk test distance \<400 meters
4. Duke Activity Status Index \<34
5. Malnutritional Screening Tool score \>=2
Exclusion Criteria
* Patients with left ventricular outflow obstruction (severe aortic stenosis, hypertrophic cardiomyopathy)
* Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease GOLD stage IV
* Abdominal aortic aneurysm \>8.0cm or suspected dissecting or leaking aortic aneurysm
* Cognitive deficits unable to comply with study procedures, physical limitations that would prelude rehabilitation and inability to regularly attend prehabilitation sessions.
50 Years
ALL
No
Sponsors
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Chinese University of Hong Kong
OTHER
Responsible Party
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WONG MAN KIN
Principal Investigator, Honorary Clinical Assistant Professor
Principal Investigators
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Man Kin Wong
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
Chinese University of Hong Kong
Locations
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Prince of Wales Hospital
Hong Kong, , Hong Kong
Countries
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References
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Wong HMK, Qi D, Ma BHM, Hou PY, Kwong CKW, Lee A; Prehab Study Group. Multidisciplinary prehabilitation to improve frailty and functional capacity in high-risk elective surgical patients: a retrospective pilot study. Perioper Med (Lond). 2024 Jan 23;13(1):6. doi: 10.1186/s13741-024-00359-x.
Provided Documents
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Document Type: Study Protocol and Statistical Analysis Plan
Other Identifiers
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2021.493-T
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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