| Literature DB >> 29988707 |
Ianthe Boden1,2, Kate Sullivan1,3, Claire Hackett4, Brooke Winzer5, Rebecca Lane6, Melissa McKinnon4, Iain Robertson7,8.
Abstract
Background: Postoperative complications and delayed physical recovery are significant problems following emergency abdominal surgery. Physiotherapy aims to aid recovery and prevent complications in the acute phase after surgery and is commonplace in most first-world hospitals. Despite ubiquitous service provision, no well-designed, adequately powered, parallel-group, randomised controlled trial has investigated the effect of physiotherapy on the incidence of respiratory complications, paralytic ileus, rate of physical recovery, ongoing need for formal sub-acute rehabilitation, hospital length of stay, health-related quality of life, and mortality following emergency abdominal surgery. We hypothesise that an enhanced physiotherapy care package of additional education, breathing exercises, and early rehabilitation prevents postoperative complications and improves physical recovery following emergency abdominal surgery compared to standard care alone.Entities:
Keywords: Abdominal surgery; Breathing exercises; Complications; Emergency surgery; Ileus; Patient education; Physiotherapy; Pneumonia; Postoperative pulmonary complication; Rehabilitation
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29988707 PMCID: PMC6029354 DOI: 10.1186/s13017-018-0189-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: World J Emerg Surg ISSN: 1749-7922 Impact factor: 5.469
TIDieR descriptions of ICEAGE interventions
| TIDieR criterion | Control | Intervention |
|---|---|---|
| Item 1. Brief name: provide the name or a phrase that describes the intervention | Standard care: ‘talk, walk, breathe’ | Enhanced physiotherapy care: ‘talk more, exercise more, breathe more’ |
| Item 2 a) Describe any rationale, theory essential to the intervention | After emergency abdominal surgery the most common cause of morbidity and mortality is a postoperative pulmonary complication (PPC). | Treatment components: |
| Item 2 b) Describe goal of the elements essential to the intervention | Treatment components: | ‘Exercise more’: The goal is to provide at least double the amount of physical activity daily. Daily physical activity will comprise of both ambulation and functional bed/chair/standing exercises. It is possible that there is a dose-dependent relationship with physical activity after surgery. Additional supervised physical activity early following surgery may hasten physical recovery and prevent complications more effectively. |
| Item 3. What (materials): describe any physical or informational materials used in the intervention, including those provided to participants or used in intervention delivery or in training of intervention providers. | Participant information materials: | Participant information materials: |
| Item 4. What (procedures): describe each of the procedures, activities, and/or processes used in the intervention, including any enabling or support activities | ‘Talk’: once off | ‘Talk more’: at least once, then as often as required |
| ‘Walk’: once daily ambulation only, < 15 min | ‘Exercise more’: once daily, ambulation and exercises, > 30 min | |
| ‘Breathe’: once off coached session | ‘Breathe more’: at least four coached sessions in the first 2 days: | |
| Item 5. Who provided: for each category of intervention, provider (for example, psychologist, nursing assistant), describe their expertise, background, and any specific training given | Qualified physiotherapists of varying experience levels at three different hospitals: new graduates, senior physiotherapists, and consultant level physiotherapists. | Qualified physiotherapists of varying experience levels at three different hospitals: new graduates, senior physiotherapists, and consultant level physiotherapists. |
| Item 6. How: describe the modes of delivery (such as face to face or by some other mechanism, such as internet or telephone) of the intervention and whether it was provided individually or in a group | Face-to-face, individual sessions | Face-to-face, individual sessions |
| Item 7. Where: describe the type(s) of location(s) where the intervention occurred, including any necessary infrastructure or relevant features | Inpatient hospital wards, patient bedsides at three government-funded, university affiliated, teaching hospitals | Inpatient hospital wards, patient bedsides at three government-funded, university-affiliated, teaching hospitals. |
| Item 8. When and how much: describe the number of times the intervention was delivered and over what period of time including the number of sessions, their schedule, and their duration, intensity or dose | See item 4 | See item 4 |
| Item 9. Tailoring: if the intervention was planned to be personalised, titrated or adapted, then describe what, why, when, and how | No tailoring | ‘Talk’—Extra education sessions can be provided by physiotherapist as necessary based upon their clinical judgement and the requirements of the patient. |
| Item 10. Modifications: If the intervention was modified during the course of the study, describe the changes (what, why, when, how) | N/A | N/A |
| Item 11. How well (planned): if intervention adherence or fidelity was assessed, describe how and by whom, and if any strategies were used to maintain or improve fidelity, describe them | Planned interim analysis of provision of ambulation programme to ensure that in > 80% of patients ambulation duration is no more than 15 min and provided until discharge criteria is met | Planned interim analysis of provision of exercise programme to ensure that in 80% of patients exercise duration is at least 30 min and provided for a minimum of five postoperative days/sessions. |
| Item 12: How well (actual): if intervention adherence or fidelity was assessed, describe the extent to which the intervention was delivered as planned | The trial will be amended or ceased for futility if there are critical failures to recruitment rates, breaches to protocol, or minimal treatment separation between groups. | The trial will be amended or ceased for futility if there are critical failures to recruitment rates, breaches to protocol, or minimal treatment separation between groups. |
Abbreviations: PPC postoperative pulmonary complications, DB&C deep breathing and coughing
Fig. 1CONSORT diagram of the ICEAGE trial. Abbreviations: DB&C deep breathing and coughing, PPC postoperative pulmonary complications, HRQOL health-related quality of life
ICEAGE ambulation protocol
| Stage 1 (safety) | Sit over edge of bed/sit in chair minimum of 2 min |
| Stage 2 (safety) | March on spot 0–1 min |
| Stage 3 (ambulation) | March on spot/walk away from bedside 1–3 min |
| Stage 4 (ambulation) | March on spot/walk away from bedside 3–6 min |
| Stage 5 (ambulation) | Walk away from bedside 6–10 min |
| Stage 6 (ambulation) | Walk away from bedside 10–15 min |
| Stage 7 (ambulation) | Walk away from bedside > 15 min |
| Provide assisted early ambulation as soon as possible on the first postoperative day. | |
Fig. 2ICEAGE exercise protocol. reps repetitions
PPC diagnostic criteria—Melbourne Group Score Version 3
| When four or more of the following criteria* are present anytime in the 24-h period 00:01 to 24:00 on a single postoperative day: |
Abbreviations: PPC postoperative pulmonary complications, SpO2 pulse oximetry, FiO2 fraction of inspired oxygen, AECOPD acute exacerbation of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, PEEP positive end expiratory pressure, CXR chest X-ray
*If a blinded physiotherapist, nurse, or physician documents in the medical record the occurrence of a criterion, it can be taken as a positive finding. If no documentation present, a blinded assessor is required to assess this directly
+If no preoperative assessment or documentation assume normal at baseline
**For ventilated patients, if FiO2 ≥ 0.5 or PEEP ≥ 8, assume criterion 3 is present (do not alter FiO2), for all other patients set FiO2 to 0.21 and observe SpO2 for 2 min. If SpO2 drops below 90%, immediately reinstate previous FiO2. If not permissible to alter ventilation parameters, assume positive
#If no written report for a CXR is available and a patient has three other positive signs, a masked senior physiotherapist or ward medical officer is to be contacted to report verbally on the available CXR
***When there are no daily measures of CXR or sputum sampling, carry over a positive finding to the next consecutive postoperative day
Fig. 3ICEAGE schedule of events and timeline. Abbreviations: POD postoperative day, D/C hospital discharge, SAQ specific activity questionnaire, WHODAS World Health Organisation disability assessment score, EQ-5D EuroQuol five domains, PPC postoperative pulmonary complication, PPOI prolonged postoperative ileus, ICU intensive care unit, LOS length of stay, mILOA modified Iowa level of assistance