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Potential mechanisms of multimodal prehabilitation effects on surgical complications: a narrative review

Potential mechanisms of multimodal prehabilitation effects on surgical complications: a narrative review
Potential mechanisms of multimodal prehabilitation effects on surgical complications: a narrative review

Continuous advances in prehabilitation research over the past several decades have clarified its role in improving preoperative risk factors, yet the evidence demonstrating reduced surgical complications remains uncertain. Describing the potential mechanisms underlying prehabilitation and surgical complications represents an important opportunity to establish biological plausibility, develop targeted therapies, generate hypotheses for future research, and contribute to the rationale for implementation into the standard of care. In this narrative review, we discuss and synthesize the current evidence base for the biological plausibility of multimodal prehabilitation to reduce surgical complications. The goal of this review is to improve prehabilitation interventions and measurement by outlining biologically plausible mechanisms of benefit and generating hypotheses for future research. This is accomplished by synthesizing the available evidence for the mechanistic benefit of exercise, nutrition, and psychological interventions for reducing the incidence and severity of surgical complications reported by the American College of Surgeons National Surgical Quality Improvement Program (ACS-NSQIP). This review was conducted and reported in accordance with a quality assessment scale for narrative reviews. Findings indicate that prehabilitation has biological plausibility to reduce all complications outlined by NSQIP. Mechanisms for prehabilitation to reduce surgical complications include anti-inflammation, enhanced innate immunity, and attenuation of sympathovagal imbalance. Mechanisms vary depending on the intervention protocol and baseline characteristics of the sample. This review highlights the need for more research in this space while proposing potential mechanisms to be included in future investigations.

exercise, mechanisms, nutrition, prehabilitation, psychological intervention, surgical complications
1715-5312
639-656
Sibley, Daniel
ad0d4fab-efe2-43d2-96da-9d9fb9b600a8
Chen, Maggie
cb4fe109-f7be-4e65-89a9-0624095f9136
West, Malcolm A.
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Matthew, Andrew G.
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Santa Mina, Daniel
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Randall, Ian
0f48436c-ac2c-4680-ac21-9c80b8660de7
Sibley, Daniel
ad0d4fab-efe2-43d2-96da-9d9fb9b600a8
Chen, Maggie
cb4fe109-f7be-4e65-89a9-0624095f9136
West, Malcolm A.
98b67e58-9875-4133-b236-8a10a0a12c04
Matthew, Andrew G.
63f80b76-c7a0-46a4-a37d-767e41f7d47b
Santa Mina, Daniel
5ed5c2c5-a620-409d-8f16-02df8052c8d9
Randall, Ian
0f48436c-ac2c-4680-ac21-9c80b8660de7

Sibley, Daniel, Chen, Maggie, West, Malcolm A., Matthew, Andrew G., Santa Mina, Daniel and Randall, Ian (2023) Potential mechanisms of multimodal prehabilitation effects on surgical complications: a narrative review. Applied Physiology, Nutrition and Metabolism, 48 (9), 639-656. (doi:10.1139/apnm-2022-0272).

Record type: Review

Abstract

Continuous advances in prehabilitation research over the past several decades have clarified its role in improving preoperative risk factors, yet the evidence demonstrating reduced surgical complications remains uncertain. Describing the potential mechanisms underlying prehabilitation and surgical complications represents an important opportunity to establish biological plausibility, develop targeted therapies, generate hypotheses for future research, and contribute to the rationale for implementation into the standard of care. In this narrative review, we discuss and synthesize the current evidence base for the biological plausibility of multimodal prehabilitation to reduce surgical complications. The goal of this review is to improve prehabilitation interventions and measurement by outlining biologically plausible mechanisms of benefit and generating hypotheses for future research. This is accomplished by synthesizing the available evidence for the mechanistic benefit of exercise, nutrition, and psychological interventions for reducing the incidence and severity of surgical complications reported by the American College of Surgeons National Surgical Quality Improvement Program (ACS-NSQIP). This review was conducted and reported in accordance with a quality assessment scale for narrative reviews. Findings indicate that prehabilitation has biological plausibility to reduce all complications outlined by NSQIP. Mechanisms for prehabilitation to reduce surgical complications include anti-inflammation, enhanced innate immunity, and attenuation of sympathovagal imbalance. Mechanisms vary depending on the intervention protocol and baseline characteristics of the sample. This review highlights the need for more research in this space while proposing potential mechanisms to be included in future investigations.

Text
Mechanisms Narrative Review April -MW - Accepted Manuscript
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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 15 May 2023
e-pub ahead of print date: 24 May 2023
Published date: September 2023
Additional Information: Publisher Copyright: © 2023, Canadian Science Publishing. All rights reserved.
Keywords: exercise, mechanisms, nutrition, prehabilitation, psychological intervention, surgical complications

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 481827
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/481827
ISSN: 1715-5312
PURE UUID: 813fdd4c-e9b7-4200-acd0-93d8d335b50a
ORCID for Malcolm A. West: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-0345-5356

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Date deposited: 11 Sep 2023 16:33
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 03:46

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Contributors

Author: Daniel Sibley
Author: Maggie Chen
Author: Malcolm A. West ORCID iD
Author: Andrew G. Matthew
Author: Daniel Santa Mina
Author: Ian Randall

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