| Literature DB >> 30866978 |
Zhi-Chao Hu1,2,3, Lin-Jie He1,2,3, Dong Chen1,2,3, Xiao-Bin Li1,2,3, Zhen-Hua Feng1,2,3, Cheng-Wei Fu4, Jiang-Wei Xuan1,2,3, Wen-Fei Ni5,6,7, Ai-Min Wu8,9,10.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: There is an increased interest in enhanced recovery after surgery (ERAS) minimizing adverse events after orthopedic surgery. Little consensus supports the effectiveness of these interventions. The purpose of present systematic review and meta-analysis is to comprehensively analyze and evaluate the significance of ERAS interventions for postoperative outcomes after orthopedic surgery.Entities:
Keywords: Enhanced recovery after surgery; Meta-analysis; Orthopedic surgery
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30866978 PMCID: PMC6415350 DOI: 10.1186/s13018-019-1116-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Orthop Surg Res ISSN: 1749-799X Impact factor: 2.359
Fig. 1Flow of trials through the meta-analysis
The characteristics of the included studies
| Source | Country | Surgical site | Intervention | No. of participants | Age, mean (SD) | Male/female |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Auyong et al. [ | USA | Joint | ERAS | 126 | 66.2 (10.2) | 44/82 |
| Traditional care | 126 | 68.44 (9.98) | 41/85 | |||
| Christelis et al. [ | Australia | Joint | ERAS | 297 | 67 (10) | 113/184 |
| Traditional care | 412 | 68 (11) | 164/248 | |||
| den Hertog et al. [ | Germany | Joint | ERAS | 74 | 66.58 (8.21) | 23/51 |
| Traditional care | 73 | 68.25 (7.91) | 20/53 | |||
| Maempel et al. [ | England | Joint | ERAS | 84 | 69.8 (8.9) | 42/42 |
| Traditional care | 81 | 70.1 (10.5) | 40/44 | |||
| Malviya et al. [ | England | Joint | ERAS | 1500 | 68 | 711/789 |
| Traditional care | 3000 | 69 | 1482/1518 | |||
| McDonald et al. [ | England | Joint | ERAS | 1081 | 69 (11) | 439/642 |
| Traditional care | 735 | 70 (13) | 307/428 | |||
| Stambough et al. [ | USA | Joint | ERAS | 488 | 55 (19) | 247/241 |
| Traditional care | 281 | 59 (16) | 126/155 | |||
| Stowers et al. [ | New Zealand | Joint | ERAS | 100 | 66.7 (9.2) | 47/53 |
| Traditional care | 100 | 65.4 (12.5) | 41/59 | |||
| Khan et al. [ | England | Joint | ERAS | 3000 | 68 (10) | 1390/1610 |
| Traditional care | 3000 | 69 (10) | 1482/1518 | |||
| Pedersen et al. [ | Denmark | Fracture | ERAS | 178 | 82.2 | 42/136 |
| Traditional care | 357 | 82.6 | 85/272 | |||
| Eriksson et al. [ | Sweden | Fracture | ERAS | 80 | 85 | 65/15 |
| Traditional care | 335 | 82 | 227/108 | |||
| Liu et al. [ | USA | Fracture | ERAS | 2514 | 79.7 (11.7) | NA |
| Traditional care | 2488 | 79.3 (11.9) | NA | |||
| Macfie et al. [ | England | Fracture | ERAS | 117 | 82.5 (9.2) | 89/28 |
| Traditional care | 115 | 82.7 (8.7) | 91/24 | |||
| Wang et al. [ | USA | Spine | ERAS | 38 | 65 (11) | 17/21 |
| Traditional care | 15 | 59 (12) | 10/5 | |||
| Nazarenko et al. [ | Russia | Spine | ERAS | 23 | 44.3 | NA |
| Traditional care | 25 | 42.2 | NA |
ERAS enhanced recovery after surgery, SD standard deviation
Fig. 2Comparison of the incidence of postoperative complications between the ERAS group and the control group
Subgroup analysis of incidence of postoperative complications for each variable
| Factors | Subgroups | Studies ( | Patients ( | Heterogeneity ( | LOS, WMD (95% CI) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Average age | 60–70 years | 8 | 3300/4542 | 0 | 0.885 | 0.67 (0.54, 0.83) |
| 70–80 years | 1 | 2514/2488 | – | – | 0.74 (0.66, 0.84) | |
| > 80 years | 2 | 295/472 | 0 | 0.565 | 0.55 (0.39, 0.76) | |
| Site | Joint | 7 | 3262/4527 | 0 | 0.831 | 0.67 (0.54, 0.84) |
| Fracture | 3 | 2809/2960 | 36.4 | 0.208 | 0.72 (0.64, 0.80) | |
| Spine | 1 | 38/15 | – | – | 0.47 (0.09, 2.41) | |
| Continents | North America | 3 | 2678/2629 | 0 | 0.612 | 0.74 (0.65, 0.84) |
| Oceania | 2 | 397/512 | 0 | 0.520 | 0.76 (0.51, 1.14) | |
| Europe | 6 | 3034/4361 | 0 | 0.802 | 0.60 (0.49, 0.75) | |
| Sample size | < 600 | 7 | 717/867 | 0 | 0.995 | 0.55 (0.42, 0.73) |
| 600–1000 | 1 | 297/412 | – | – | 0.83 (0.51, 1.35) | |
| > 1000 | 3 | 5095/6233 | 5.6 | 0.347 | 0.73 (0.65, 0.82) |
WMD weighted mean difference, CI confidence intervals
Fig. 3Comparison of 30-day readmission between the ERAS group and the control group
Fig. 4Comparison of the 30-day mortality rate between the ERAS group and the control group
Fig. 5Comparison of Oswestry Disability Index (ODI) between the ERAS group and the control group