| Literature DB >> 32085813 |
Ana Licina1, Andrew Silvers2, Harry Laughlin3, Jeremy Russell3, Crispin Wan4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The best evidence-enhanced recovery care pathway is yet to be defined for patients undergoing spinal surgery. Minimally invasive surgery, multimodal analgesia, early mobilization, and early postoperative nutrition have been considered as critical components of enhanced recovery in spinal surgery (ERSS). The objective of this study will be to synthesize the evidence underpinning individual components of a proposed multidisciplinary enhanced recovery pathway for patients undergoing spinal surgery.Entities:
Keywords: Enhanced recovery; Minimally invasive surgery; Multimodal analgesia; Perioperative nutrition; Perioperative outcomes; Perioperative pathway; Preadmission processes; Prehabilitation; Spinal surgery
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32085813 PMCID: PMC7035675 DOI: 10.1186/s13643-020-1283-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Syst Rev ISSN: 2046-4053
Individual components of enhanced recovery pathway in spinal surgery, grouped according to care delivery episode
| Preadmission period | Intraoperative period | Postoperative period |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Preadmission information, education and counseling | 8. Perioperative blood conservation strategies | 17. Thromboprophylaxis |
| 2. Risk assessment, preoperative optimization, including lifestyle factor modification | 9. Minimally invasive surgical approaches | 18. Urinary drainage |
| 2.1 Preoperative risk stratification | 10. Skin preparation and antimicrobial prophylaxis | 19. Postoperative nutrition and fluid management |
| 2.2 Preoperative optimization | 11. Local anesthetic infiltration | 20. Postoperative glycemic control |
| 2.3 Alcohol use | 12. Anesthetic protocol | 21. Early mobilization |
| 2.4 Tobacco use | 13. Prevention of post-operative nausea and vomiting | 22. Audit |
| 3. Prehabilitation | 14. Maintenance of normothermia | |
| 4. Pre-operative nutritional care | 15. Fluid management | |
| 4.1 Pre-operative nutritional screening | 16. Perioperative analgesic measures | |
| 4.2 Pre- and peri-operative immune-nutrition | ||
| 5. Management of anemia | ||
| Preoperative period | ||
| 6. Preoperative fasting and carbohydrate loading | ||
| 7. Pre-emptive analgesia | ||
Spinal surgical procedures
| Anterior cervical decompression and fusion | |
| Posterior cervical decompression/fusion | |
| Thoracic decompression and fusion | |
| Scoliosis correction | |
| Multilevel decompression and fusion | |
| Lumbar decompression and fusion | |
| Lumbar laminectomy | |
| Lumbar micro-discectomy |
Summary of eligibility criteria
| Study characteristic | Inclusion criteria | Exclusion criteria |
|---|---|---|
| Patient population | Adults undergoing spinal surgical procedures. Pediatric population undergoing spinal surgical procedures. | Patients undergoing non-surgical management of spinal conditions Traumatic patients without surgery |
| Intervention-treatment | Twenty-two pre-defined components of an ERSS pathway (as outlined in Table Other proposed ERSS pathways incorporating one or more pre-defined interventions will be included. | |
| Comparator | Standard of care, no treatment, or placebo | |
| Outcomes | Mortality from all causes Morbidity including: pulmonary, cardiac and renal complication rates, surgical complication rates (including readmissions) Patient reported experiences and outcomes (PROMs/PREMS): pain-related outcomes (e.g., pain score rating, pain management satisfaction), quality of care (readiness for surgery, quality of care patient scores, quality of recovery after surgery), Health service-related outcomes: length of stay (in hospital, in ICU) and economic/financial outcomes (e.g., costs of patient stay) | |
| Study design | Systematic reviews, meta-analysis Randomized controlled trials Non-randomized studies Observational studies (cohort studies, case-control studies, cross-sectional studies, case series) | Case reports |
| Study setting | Inpatient care (including patients whose condition requires admission to a hospital same-day discharge surgical) | Outpatient clinics, medical, and non-surgical management of spinal conditions |
| Timing | Perioperative process-preadmission, preoperative, intraoperative, and postoperative setting | Studies incorporating long-term (greater than three months) postoperative rehabilitation |