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Research priorities in prehabilitation for patients undergoing cancer surgery: an international Delphi study

Research priorities in prehabilitation for patients undergoing cancer surgery: an international Delphi study
Research priorities in prehabilitation for patients undergoing cancer surgery: an international Delphi study
Background: recently, the number of prehabilitation trials has increased significantly. The identification of key research priorities is vital in guiding future research directions. Thus, the aim of this collaborative study was to define key research priorities in prehabilitation for patients undergoing cancer surgery.
Methods: the Delphi methodology was implemented over three rounds of surveys distributed to prehabilitation experts from across multiple specialties, tumour streams and countries via a secure online platform. In the first round, participants were asked to provide baseline demographics and to identify five top prehabilitation research priorities. In successive rounds, participants were asked to rank research priorities on a 5-point Likert scale. Consensus was considered if > 70% of participants indicated agreement on each research priority.
Results: a total of 165 prehabilitation experts participated, including medical doctors, physiotherapists, dieticians, nurses, and academics across four continents. The first round identified 446 research priorities, collated within 75 unique research questions. Over two successive rounds, a list of 10 research priorities reached international consensus of importance. These included the efficacy of prehabilitation on varied postoperative outcomes, benefit to specific patient groups, ideal programme composition, cost efficacy, enhancing compliance and adherence, effect during neoadjuvant therapies, and modes of delivery.
Conclusions: this collaborative international study identified the top 10 research priorities in prehabilitation for patients undergoing cancer surgery. The identified priorities inform research strategies, provide future directions for prehabilitation research, support resource allocation and enhance the prehabilitation evidence base in cancer patients undergoing surgery.
Cancer, Delphi, Perioperative care, Prehabilitation, Research priorities, Surgery
1068-9265
7226-7235
Raichurkar, Pratik
59c82e8c-4a67-4bd3-b7f7-750642e72bd8
Denehy, Linda
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Solomon, Michael
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Koh, Cherry
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Pillinger, Neil
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Hogan, Sophie
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McBride, Kate
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Carey, Sharon
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Bartyn, Jenna
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Hirst, Nicholas
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Steffens, Daniel
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West, Malcolm
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Prehabilitation Expert Collaborative
Raichurkar, Pratik
59c82e8c-4a67-4bd3-b7f7-750642e72bd8
Denehy, Linda
77ddbcaa-6710-47c8-a19e-ec6e66f5fe19
Solomon, Michael
4a0d1dc1-115c-4b1c-976b-4d3cd58e7af4
Koh, Cherry
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Pillinger, Neil
45c2266e-711e-4d14-bdab-f4c758c4ba4b
Hogan, Sophie
c724f70f-47f0-4fb2-855e-877ff850c9a5
McBride, Kate
ec81c634-21d8-4095-a501-eea8ed19d07d
Carey, Sharon
98e631f2-7a79-49c7-a9ad-6f0e31a6b8ff
Bartyn, Jenna
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Hirst, Nicholas
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Steffens, Daniel
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West, Malcolm
98b67e58-9875-4133-b236-8a10a0a12c04

Raichurkar, Pratik, Denehy, Linda and Solomon, Michael , Prehabilitation Expert Collaborative (2023) Research priorities in prehabilitation for patients undergoing cancer surgery: an international Delphi study. Annals of surgical oncology, 30 (12), 7226-7235. (doi:10.1245/s10434-023-14192-x).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: recently, the number of prehabilitation trials has increased significantly. The identification of key research priorities is vital in guiding future research directions. Thus, the aim of this collaborative study was to define key research priorities in prehabilitation for patients undergoing cancer surgery.
Methods: the Delphi methodology was implemented over three rounds of surveys distributed to prehabilitation experts from across multiple specialties, tumour streams and countries via a secure online platform. In the first round, participants were asked to provide baseline demographics and to identify five top prehabilitation research priorities. In successive rounds, participants were asked to rank research priorities on a 5-point Likert scale. Consensus was considered if > 70% of participants indicated agreement on each research priority.
Results: a total of 165 prehabilitation experts participated, including medical doctors, physiotherapists, dieticians, nurses, and academics across four continents. The first round identified 446 research priorities, collated within 75 unique research questions. Over two successive rounds, a list of 10 research priorities reached international consensus of importance. These included the efficacy of prehabilitation on varied postoperative outcomes, benefit to specific patient groups, ideal programme composition, cost efficacy, enhancing compliance and adherence, effect during neoadjuvant therapies, and modes of delivery.
Conclusions: this collaborative international study identified the top 10 research priorities in prehabilitation for patients undergoing cancer surgery. The identified priorities inform research strategies, provide future directions for prehabilitation research, support resource allocation and enhance the prehabilitation evidence base in cancer patients undergoing surgery.

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Accepted/In Press date: 6 August 2023
e-pub ahead of print date: 24 August 2023
Published date: 1 November 2023
Additional Information: Funding Information: The authors would like to acknowledge the contributions of all prehabilitation experts who participated in our Delphi study. Prehabilitation Expert Collaborative: Jonathan Allen, Kevin Ancog, Eva Angenete, Nabila Ansari, Fabio Ausania, Anna Beaumont, Christian Beilstein, Frederik Berrevoet, Ianthe Boden, Kimberley Bostock, Janine Bothe, Birgitte Brandstrup, Louise Brennan, Kilian Brown, Sorrel Burden, Crystal Burgess, Elaine Burns, Francesco Carli, Vinicius Cavalheri, Wim Ceelen, Tyler Chesney, David Clark, Kari Clifford, Kelcie Cole, Thomas Collyer, Rob Copeland, Roland Croner, Jess Crowe, Ian Daniels, Gerard Danjoux, June Davis, Caitlin Davis, Mayke de Klerk, Tina Decorte, Jan Willem Dekker, Andreas Denys, Liesbeth Desender, Pieter Dries, Declan Dunne, Lara Edbrooke, Linda Edgar, Sabry Eissa, Dominique Engel, Martyn Evans, Rhonda Farrell, Alice Finch, Aisling Fleury, Patrice Forget, Nader Francis, Frank Frizelle, Walter Frontera, Karen Geboes, Hugh Giddings, Chris Gillespie, Chelsia Gillis, Olivier Glehen, Varsha Gorey, Catherine Granger, Diana Greenfield, Ben Griffiths, Chloe Grimmett, Claire Hackett, Travis Hall, Julie Hallet, Craig Harris, Sophie Hatcher, Lizza Hendriks, Mendy Hermans, Carl Ilyas, Hilmy Ismail, John Jenkins, Wilson Jiang, Charlotte Johnstone, Andreas Karakatsanis, Sascha Karunaratne, Simarjit Kaur, Michael Kelly, Joost Klaase, Dorian Kršul, Scott Leslie, Jenelle Loeliger, Marie-Louise Lydrup, Andrea Maier, Piotr Major, Preet Makker, Christopher Mantyh, Stuart McCluskey, Laura McGarrity, Jayson Moloney, Isacco Montroni, Brendan Moran, Paul Morris, Susan Moug, Rajeswari Ms, Sandra Murdoch, Anna Myers, Kheng-Seong Ng, Per J Nilsson, Peter Noordzij, Mike O'Connor, Gianluca Pellino, Shannon Philp, Marc Pocard, Zudin Puthucheary, Emma Putrus, Aaron Quyn, Thomas Read, William Ricketts, Bernhard Riedel, Harm Rutten, Charissa Sabajo, Rawand Salihi, Tarik Sammour, Charbel Sandroussi, Daniel Santa Mina, Stefan Saric, Raquel Sebio, Doruk Seyfi, Favil Singh, Gerrit Slooter, Neil Smart, Lissa Spencer, Paul Sutton, Hao Ern Tan, David Ten Cate, Akif Turna, Elke Van Daele, Adinda van den Berg, Charlotte van Kessel, Gabrielle van Ramshorst, Emiel Verdaasdonk, Jennifer Vu, Chris Wakeman, Malcolm West, James Wheeler, Duminda Wijeysundera, Hideaki Yano. Publisher Copyright: © 2023, The Author(s).
Keywords: Cancer, Delphi, Perioperative care, Prehabilitation, Research priorities, Surgery

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 481853
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/481853
ISSN: 1068-9265
PURE UUID: 69dd93bb-3320-4df3-858b-46cadbbaa705
ORCID for Malcolm West: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-0345-5356

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Date deposited: 11 Sep 2023 17:02
Last modified: 18 Mar 2024 03:40

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Contributors

Author: Pratik Raichurkar
Author: Linda Denehy
Author: Michael Solomon
Author: Cherry Koh
Author: Neil Pillinger
Author: Sophie Hogan
Author: Kate McBride
Author: Sharon Carey
Author: Jenna Bartyn
Author: Nicholas Hirst
Author: Daniel Steffens
Author: Malcolm West ORCID iD
Corporate Author: Prehabilitation Expert Collaborative

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