| Literature DB >> 26215107 |
Dai Shida1, Kyoko Tagawa2, Kentaro Inada3, Keiichi Nasu3, Yasuji Seyama3, Tsuyoshi Maeshiro3, Sachio Miyamoto3, Satoru Inoue3, Nobutaka Umekita3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Japan has one of the highest five-year relative survival rates for colorectal cancer in the world, with its own traditions of perioperative care and a unique insurance system. The benefits of enhanced recovery after surgery (ERAS) protocols in the Japanese population have yet to be clarified.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26215107 PMCID: PMC4517644 DOI: 10.1186/s12893-015-0079-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Surg ISSN: 1471-2482 Impact factor: 2.102
Changes in perioperative care
| Traditional care | ERAS | |
|---|---|---|
| Preoperative counseling | only by surgeons | intensive (by both surgeons and anesthesiologists) |
| Preoperative fasting (oral intake) | no food on the previous day | normal diet until the previous evening |
| no drink after the previous noon | drink oral hydration solution (OS-1R) until 3 hours before surgery* | |
| Preoperative bowel preparation | usually | sometimes for colon cancer, and always for rectal cancer |
| Perioperative fluid management (avoidance of sodium/fluid overload) | no | yes (goal-directed fluid therapy) |
| Short incisions/lapascopic surgery | no | always |
| Intraoperative warm-air body heating | sometimes | always |
| Nasogastric tube | used (remove at POD1) | not used |
| Postoperative fasting | no oral intake for 3 days postoperatively | initiate oral hydration (OS-1R) on the morning of POD1* |
| start eating soup at POD5 | start eating rice at POD3 | |
| Routine postoperative mobilization care | yes (walk by POD2) | enforced (walk in the morning of POD1) |
| Non-opiate oral analgesics/NSAIDs | no | given routinely |
| Stimulation of gut motility | no | yes (use of oral magnesium oxide) |
| Early urinary catheter removal | no | yes |
| Multimodal approach | few cases | every case |
| Anesthesia and analgesics | combination of epidural analgesia and general anesthesis (use of remifentanil) | |
| Avoidance of pre-anesthetic medication (no pre-medication) | Yes | |
| Abstinence from smoking and drinking | Yes | |
*Three 500-ml plastic bottles of oral rehydration solution [OS-1R; Otsuka Pharmaceutical, Tokushima, Japan]
Patient characteristics
| Traditional | ERAS | |
|---|---|---|
| 2009.07-2010.06 | 2010.07-2012.11 | |
| n = 95 | n = 257 | |
| Sex (male/female) | 65/30 | 165/92 |
| Age (years) | 69.1 ± 9.0 | 68.8 ± 11.5 |
| Body mass index (kg/m2) | 22.3 ± 3.1 | 22.0 ± 3.5 |
| ASA (1/2/3) | 3/78/14 | 3/211/43 |
| Tumor location (colon/rectum) | 59/36 | 168/89 |
| Surgical approach (open/laparoscopic) | 95/0 | 203/54* |
| Number of retrieved lymph nodes | 32.9 ± 20.2 | 33.6 ± 19.7 |
| Stage (0/I/II/III/IV) | 1/7/27/39/21 | 6/37/90/85/39 |
*p < 0.05
Intraoperative outcomes
| Traditional | ERAS | |
|---|---|---|
| Operative time (min) | 222.3 ± 106.2 | 205.6 ± 70.5 |
| Blood loss (gram) | 639.0 ± 744.8 | 516.6 ± 740.2 |
| Volume of intraoperative infusion (ml) | 3218.2 ± 2100.3 | 2232.7 ± 1168.6* |
*p < 0.05
Fig. 1Postoperative length of hospital stay (LOS) is shown as a histogram and box and whisker plots (25th, 75th percentiles) for both traditional and ERAS groups. Median LOS is indicated by horizontal bars, and mean LOS by rhombuses. Horizontal boundaries of the boxes represent the first and third quartiles. *P < 0.05
Postoperative outcomes
| Traditional | ERAS | |
|---|---|---|
| Postoperative complications | 9 (9.5 %) | 24 (9.3 %) |
| anastomotic leakage | 2 (2.1 %) | 5 (1.9 %) |
| ileus | 3 (3.1 %) | 9 (3.5 %) |
| pneumonia | 1 (1.0 %) | 4 (1.6 %) |
| cardiac disorder | 1 (1.0 %) | 1 (0.4 %) |
| other | 2 (2.1 %) | 5 (1.9 %) |
| Readmission within 30 days | 8 (8.3 %) | 17 (6.6 %) |
| Reoperation within 30 days | 2 (2.1 %) | 4 (1.6 %) |
| Mortality | 0 (0 %) | 1 (0.4 %) |