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Effectiveness of prehabilitation modalities on postoperative outcomes following colorectal cancer surgery: a systematic review of randomised controlled trials

Effectiveness of prehabilitation modalities on postoperative outcomes following colorectal cancer surgery: a systematic review of randomised controlled trials
Effectiveness of prehabilitation modalities on postoperative outcomes following colorectal cancer surgery: a systematic review of randomised controlled trials

Background: postoperative morbidity in patients undergoing curative colorectal cancer surgery is high. Prehabilitation has been suggested to reduce postoperative morbidity, however its effectiveness is still lacking.

Objective: the aim of this study was to investigate the effectiveness of prehabilitation in reducing postoperative morbidity and length of hospital stay in patients undergoing colorectal cancer surgery.

Methods: a comprehensive electronic search was conducted in the CINAHL, Cochrane Library, Medline, PsychINFO, AMED, and Embase databases from inception to April 2023. Randomised controlled trials testing the effectiveness of prehabilitation, including exercise, nutrition, and/or psychological interventions, compared with usual care in patients undergoing colorectal cancer surgery were included. Two independent review authors extracted relevant information and assessed the risk of bias. Random-effect meta-analyses were used to pool outcomes, and the quality of evidence was assessed using Grading of Recommendations, Assessment, Development, and Evaluations (GRADE) guidelines.

Results: a total of 23 trials were identified (N = 2475 patients), including multimodal (3 trials), exercise (3 trials), nutrition (16 trials), and psychological (1 trial) prehabilitation. There was moderate-quality evidence that preoperative nutrition significantly reduced postoperative infectious complications (relative risk 0.65, 95% confidence interval [CI] 0.45-0.94) and low-quality evidence on reducing the length of hospital stay (mean difference 0.87, 95% CI 0.17-1.58) compared with control. A single trial demonstrated an effect of multimodal prehabilitation on postoperative complication.

Conclusion: nutrition prehabilitation was effective in reducing infectious complications and length of hospital stay. Whether other multimodal, exercise, and psychological prehabilitation modalities improve postoperative outcomes after colorectal cancer surgery is uncertain as the current quality of evidence is low.

Protocol registration: Open Science Framework ( https://doi.org/10.17605/OSF.IO/VW72N ).

Colorectal cancer, Meta-analysis, Postoperative complication, Prehabilitation, Surgery, Systematic review
1068-9265
7822-7849
Steffens, Daniel
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Nott, Finley
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Koh, Cherry
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Jiang, Wilson
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Hirst, Nicholas
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Cole, Ruby
f4045089-481b-4883-af71-580006ea34db
Karunaratne, Sascha
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West, Malcolm A.
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Jack, Sandy
a175e649-83e1-4a76-8f11-ab37ffd954ea
Solomon, Michael J.
47ed4936-821b-4876-86f3-5276b831e268
Steffens, Daniel
7ca6c0a7-52d9-4aca-a743-87b344b935d9
Nott, Finley
3b9035c1-6987-4225-8f58-d5f2989b80c6
Koh, Cherry
8fb5d7fe-514d-41bd-a467-d15ca5644507
Jiang, Wilson
b37a37b5-ebb7-49d4-9af7-7b52976f9035
Hirst, Nicholas
24e4d1d3-8590-48f4-92c8-1d8d0c97e667
Cole, Ruby
f4045089-481b-4883-af71-580006ea34db
Karunaratne, Sascha
54a1ba98-51b6-4b00-a9f6-d253fde0d751
West, Malcolm A.
98b67e58-9875-4133-b236-8a10a0a12c04
Jack, Sandy
a175e649-83e1-4a76-8f11-ab37ffd954ea
Solomon, Michael J.
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Steffens, Daniel, Nott, Finley, Koh, Cherry, Jiang, Wilson, Hirst, Nicholas, Cole, Ruby, Karunaratne, Sascha, West, Malcolm A., Jack, Sandy and Solomon, Michael J. (2024) Effectiveness of prehabilitation modalities on postoperative outcomes following colorectal cancer surgery: a systematic review of randomised controlled trials. Annals of surgical oncology, 31 (12), 7822-7849. (doi:10.1245/s10434-024-15593-2).

Record type: Review

Abstract

Background: postoperative morbidity in patients undergoing curative colorectal cancer surgery is high. Prehabilitation has been suggested to reduce postoperative morbidity, however its effectiveness is still lacking.

Objective: the aim of this study was to investigate the effectiveness of prehabilitation in reducing postoperative morbidity and length of hospital stay in patients undergoing colorectal cancer surgery.

Methods: a comprehensive electronic search was conducted in the CINAHL, Cochrane Library, Medline, PsychINFO, AMED, and Embase databases from inception to April 2023. Randomised controlled trials testing the effectiveness of prehabilitation, including exercise, nutrition, and/or psychological interventions, compared with usual care in patients undergoing colorectal cancer surgery were included. Two independent review authors extracted relevant information and assessed the risk of bias. Random-effect meta-analyses were used to pool outcomes, and the quality of evidence was assessed using Grading of Recommendations, Assessment, Development, and Evaluations (GRADE) guidelines.

Results: a total of 23 trials were identified (N = 2475 patients), including multimodal (3 trials), exercise (3 trials), nutrition (16 trials), and psychological (1 trial) prehabilitation. There was moderate-quality evidence that preoperative nutrition significantly reduced postoperative infectious complications (relative risk 0.65, 95% confidence interval [CI] 0.45-0.94) and low-quality evidence on reducing the length of hospital stay (mean difference 0.87, 95% CI 0.17-1.58) compared with control. A single trial demonstrated an effect of multimodal prehabilitation on postoperative complication.

Conclusion: nutrition prehabilitation was effective in reducing infectious complications and length of hospital stay. Whether other multimodal, exercise, and psychological prehabilitation modalities improve postoperative outcomes after colorectal cancer surgery is uncertain as the current quality of evidence is low.

Protocol registration: Open Science Framework ( https://doi.org/10.17605/OSF.IO/VW72N ).

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Accepted/In Press date: 28 May 2024
e-pub ahead of print date: 24 June 2024
Keywords: Colorectal cancer, Meta-analysis, Postoperative complication, Prehabilitation, Surgery, Systematic review

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 493679
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/493679
ISSN: 1068-9265
PURE UUID: c7c40ae4-fe4f-4ffe-8cf1-131492f8e776
ORCID for Malcolm A. West: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-0345-5356

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Date deposited: 10 Sep 2024 16:52
Last modified: 19 Oct 2024 01:52

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Contributors

Author: Daniel Steffens
Author: Finley Nott
Author: Cherry Koh
Author: Wilson Jiang
Author: Nicholas Hirst
Author: Ruby Cole
Author: Sascha Karunaratne
Author: Malcolm A. West ORCID iD
Author: Sandy Jack
Author: Michael J. Solomon

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