| Literature DB >> 26295261 |
Ruth Mary Parks1, Siri Rostoft2, Nina Ommundsen3, Kwok-Leung Cheung4.
Abstract
Optimal surgical management of older adults with cancer starts pre-operatively. The surgeon plays a key role in the appropriate selection of patients and procedures, optimisation of their functional status prior to surgery, and provision of more intensive care for those who are at high risk of post-operative complications. The literature, mainly based on retrospective, non-randomised studies, suggests that factors such as age, co-morbidities, pre-operative cognitive function and intensity of the surgical procedure all appear to contribute to the development of post-operative complications. Several studies have shown that a pre-operative geriatric assessment predicts post-operative mortality and morbidity as well as survival in older surgical cancer patients. Geriatricians are used to working in multidisciplinary teams that assess older patients and make individual treatment plans. However, the role of the geriatrician in the surgical oncology setting is not well established. A geriatrician could be a valuable contribution to the treatment team both in the pre-operative stage (patient assessment and pre-operative optimisation) and the post-operative stage (patient assessment and treatment of medical complications as well as discharge planning).Entities:
Keywords: cancer in the older adult; comprehensive geriatric assessment; geriatrician; multidisciplinary team; surgeon
Year: 2015 PMID: 26295261 PMCID: PMC4586786 DOI: 10.3390/cancers7030853
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancers (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6694 Impact factor: 6.639
Comparison of surgery with potential non-operative treatment—notable examples.
| Cancer | Surgical | Non-Surgical |
|---|---|---|
| Breast | Mastectomy or wide local excision | Primary endocrine therapy or radiotherapy |
| Prostate | Radical prostatectomy | Endocrine therapy or radiotherapy |
| Rectal | Rectal resection | Chemoradiotherapy |
| Lung (non small-cell) | Lobectomy or pneumonectomy | Radical radiotherapy |
Potentially modifiable factors to improve surgical outcome.
| Factor | Evidence | Targeted Intervention |
|---|---|---|
| Comorbidity | A number of studies have undoubtedly shown that comorbidity is associated with adverse post-operative outcomes. This includes comorbidity measured by number, severity and using a validated comorbidity measurement scale [ | Preoperative optimisation of treatment of all comorbid diseases. Most frequent examples: Heart failure; consider beta blocker and ACE inhibitor treatment, Ischemic heart disease; consider statins, antiplatelet and beta blocker therapy, preoperative percutaneous coronary intervention if unstable disease. Arrhythmias; consider anticoagulant therapy and betablocker therapy or pacemaker implantation. COPD; optimise anti-obstructive therapy. Smoking; cessation program Diabetes mellitus; Optimise glucose-lowering regime Aneamia; assessment of cause. Vitamin B or iron supplements if needed. Preoperative tranfusion. |
| In a retrospective study of 449 patients aged 65 years and older with invasive and | ||
| Pei | ||
| Musallam | ||
| Nutritional status | A study by Takama | Preoperative and postoperative nutritional support [ |
| Jiang | ||
| A systematic literature review by van Stijn | ||
| Smoking | Ogawa | Signposting to “stop smoking” services |
| A small study by Gerude | ||
| In the studies by Rocco | ||
| Functional reserve— | Junejo | Prehabilitation exercise program |
| West | ||
| Polypharmacy | Cessation of medication that is no longer indicated. Particular focus on medication that increases risk of postoperative complications such as delirium and renal failure. | |
| Cognitive function | Multifactorial intervention [ | Prevention of delirium through a multifactorial intervention [ |
| Emotional status | No RCTs done | Psychiatric follow-up, antidepressant therapy. |
| Social network | Postoperative planning of care, involvment of next of kin. |
Comparison of key points from surgical versus geriatric perspective.
| Surgical Key Points | Geriatric Key Points | |
|---|---|---|
| Selection for surgery | Intent of surgery e.g., curative Extent of surgical procedure required Alternative non-operative treatment available | Remaining life expectancy Frailty Cognitive function Patient preferences |
| Pre-operative assessment | Concept of prehabilitation Optimisation of comorbidities Identification of post-operative intensive care needs | Functional status Physical performance Comorbidities Cognitive function Nutritional status Emotional status Social network |
| Post-operative management | Optimisation of care, including intensive care if necessary, in high risk patients Concept of early rehabilitation | Managing complications Prevent delirium Early rehabilitation |
| Potential models of care | Multidisciplinary team, including surgeon and geriatrician, performs geriatric assessment and intervention Dedicated clinic with surgeon and geriatrician in attendance Geriatric liaison performs geriatric assessment and intervention | |