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Perioperative fluid management: evidence-based consensus recommendations from the international multidisciplinary PeriOperative Quality Initiative

Perioperative fluid management: evidence-based consensus recommendations from the international multidisciplinary PeriOperative Quality Initiative
Perioperative fluid management: evidence-based consensus recommendations from the international multidisciplinary PeriOperative Quality Initiative
Fluid therapy is an integral component of perioperative management. In light of emerging evidence in this area, the Perioperative Quality Initiative (POQI) convened an international multiprofessional expert meeting to generate evidence-based consensus recommendations for fluid management in patients undergoing surgery. This article provides a summary of the recommendations for perioperative fluid management of surgical patients from the preoperative period until hospital discharge and for all types of elective and emergency surgery, apart from burn injuries and head and neck surgery. Where evidence was lacking, recommendations for future research were generated. Specific recommendations are made for fluid management in elective major noncardiac surgery, cardiopulmonary bypass, thoracic surgery, neurosurgery, minor noncardiac surgery under general anaesthesia, and critical illness. There are ongoing gaps in knowledge resulting in variation in practice and some disagreement with our consensus recommendations. Perioperative fluid management should be individualised, taking into account the type of surgery and important patient factors, including intravascular volume status and acute and chronic comorbidities. Recommendations are made for further research in perioperative fluid management to address important gaps.
POQI, consensus statement, fluid management, fluids, perioperative medicine
0007-0912
1263-1275
Ostermann, Marlies
3aad45dd-7d86-40cf-80ee-d6401ebdace2
Auzinger, Georg
7e9db05b-48a2-4380-9dda-a58b2ba675e3
Grocott, Michael
1e87b741-513e-4a22-be13-0f7bb344e8c2
Morton-Bailey, Victoria
ea1f1c40-f9f5-4314-b74b-bd6eb67659c4
Raphael, Jacob
8910875c-3e0d-4a50-85ba-fd8699cf1987
Shaw, Andrew D.
6690c15c-4ace-4fc1-9069-253feaa14fa3
Zarbock, Alexander
5695df3d-601b-484b-b854-2c3a9ddcfb1b
POQI XI Investigators
Ostermann, Marlies
3aad45dd-7d86-40cf-80ee-d6401ebdace2
Auzinger, Georg
7e9db05b-48a2-4380-9dda-a58b2ba675e3
Grocott, Michael
1e87b741-513e-4a22-be13-0f7bb344e8c2
Morton-Bailey, Victoria
ea1f1c40-f9f5-4314-b74b-bd6eb67659c4
Raphael, Jacob
8910875c-3e0d-4a50-85ba-fd8699cf1987
Shaw, Andrew D.
6690c15c-4ace-4fc1-9069-253feaa14fa3
Zarbock, Alexander
5695df3d-601b-484b-b854-2c3a9ddcfb1b

POQI XI Investigators (2024) Perioperative fluid management: evidence-based consensus recommendations from the international multidisciplinary PeriOperative Quality Initiative. British Journal of Anaesthesia, 133 (6), 1263-1275. (doi:10.1016/j.bja.2024.07.038).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Fluid therapy is an integral component of perioperative management. In light of emerging evidence in this area, the Perioperative Quality Initiative (POQI) convened an international multiprofessional expert meeting to generate evidence-based consensus recommendations for fluid management in patients undergoing surgery. This article provides a summary of the recommendations for perioperative fluid management of surgical patients from the preoperative period until hospital discharge and for all types of elective and emergency surgery, apart from burn injuries and head and neck surgery. Where evidence was lacking, recommendations for future research were generated. Specific recommendations are made for fluid management in elective major noncardiac surgery, cardiopulmonary bypass, thoracic surgery, neurosurgery, minor noncardiac surgery under general anaesthesia, and critical illness. There are ongoing gaps in knowledge resulting in variation in practice and some disagreement with our consensus recommendations. Perioperative fluid management should be individualised, taking into account the type of surgery and important patient factors, including intravascular volume status and acute and chronic comorbidities. Recommendations are made for further research in perioperative fluid management to address important gaps.

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Accepted/In Press date: 31 July 2024
e-pub ahead of print date: 27 September 2024
Published date: 16 November 2024
Keywords: POQI, consensus statement, fluid management, fluids, perioperative medicine

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 496450
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/496450
ISSN: 0007-0912
PURE UUID: 868b020e-9def-441a-a9b6-76672b285f8e
ORCID for Michael Grocott: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-9484-7581

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Date deposited: 13 Dec 2024 18:10
Last modified: 14 Dec 2024 02:43

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Contributors

Author: Marlies Ostermann
Author: Georg Auzinger
Author: Michael Grocott ORCID iD
Author: Victoria Morton-Bailey
Author: Jacob Raphael
Author: Andrew D. Shaw
Author: Alexander Zarbock
Corporate Author: POQI XI Investigators

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