| Literature DB >> 35194411 |
Julie K Silver1, Daniel Santa Mina2, Andrew Bates3, Chelsia Gillis4, Emily M Silver5, Tracey L Hunter6, Sandy Jack3.
Abstract
Purpose of Review: Multimodal prehabilitation aims to improve preoperative health in ways that reduce surgical complications and expedite post-operative recovery. However, the extent to which preoperative health has been affected by the COVID-19 pandemic is unclear and evidence for the mitigating effects of prehabilitation in this context has not been elucidated. The COVID-19 pandemic has forced a rapid reorganization of perioperative pathways. Delayed diagnosis and surgery have caused a backlog of cases awaiting surgery increasing the risk of more complex procedures due to disease progression. Poor fitness and preoperative deconditioning are predictive of surgical complications and may be compounded by pandemic-related restrictions to accessing supportive services. The COVID-19 pandemic has forced a rapid reorganization of perioperative pathways. This narrative review aims to summarize the understanding of the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic on preoperative health and related behaviors and their implication for the need and delivery for prehabilitation to engender improved surgical outcomes. A literature search of Medline was conducted for articles related to preoperative health, prehabilitation, and surgical outcomes published between December 1, 2020 and January 31, 2021. Additional hand searches for relevant publications within the included literature were also conducted through October 15, 2021. Recent Findings: The COVID-19 pandemic, and measures designed to reduce the spread of the virus, have resulted in physical deconditioning, deleterious dietary changes, substance misuse, and heightened anxiety prior to surgery. Due to the adverse health changes prior to surgery, and often protracted waiting time for surgery, there is likely an elevated risk of peri- and post-operative complications. A small number of prehabilitation services and research programmes have been rapidly adapted or implemented to address these needs. Summary: During the COVID-19 pandemic to date, people undergoing surgery have faced a triple threat posed by extended wait times for surgery, reduced access to supportive services, and an elevated risk of poor outcomes. It is imperative that healthcare providers find ways to employ evidence-based prehabilitation strategies that are accessible and safe to mitigate the negative impact of the pandemic on surgical outcomes. Attention should be paid to cohorts most affected by established health inequities and further exacerbated by the pandemic.Entities:
Keywords: Anaesthesia; Anesthesia; COVID-19; Pandemic; Perioperative care; Physical and rehabilitation medicine; Prehabilitation; Preoperative care; Preoperative period; Rehabilitation
Year: 2022 PMID: 35194411 PMCID: PMC8855650 DOI: 10.1007/s40140-022-00520-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Anesthesiol Rep ISSN: 1523-3855
Fig. 1Stress and surgery. This figure demonstrates how stress may impact surgery due to a host of physical and psychological factors and relationships
Substance use during the COVID-19 pandemic
| Tobacco Smoking | Alcohol | Opioids | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Potential Correlates of Increased Substance Use During the COVID-19 Pandemic | Psychosocial stress, younger age, lower education, second-hand exposure | Psychosocial stress, mental health issues, financial constraints, maintenance of availability | Psychosocial stress, limited health care access, mental health issues |
| Potential Correlates of Decreased Substance Use During the COVID-19 Pandemic | COVID-19 health concerns, limited availability | Limited availability | Limited availability |
This table provides a summary of some of the issues related to substance use during the COVID-19 pandemic. Prehabilitation protocols should include evaluations of substance use and abuse. Smoking cessation is typically recommended prior to surgery.
Summary guidance for the recovery of elective surgical services following the pandemic
| Action | Key recommendation | Detail | Additional resources |
|---|---|---|---|
| Shared decision making (SDM) | SDM should be embedded within the perioperative pathway from the point of contemplation of surgery, involving patient, family and the multi-disciplinary team | • Clinicians should encourage patients to express what is important to them. Consider using BRAN format: Benefits, Risks, Alternatives, doing Nothing • Clinicians should use underlying principles of SDM such as motivational interviewing, risk communication, etc | • • • • |
| Patient self-screening | Patients should complete a validated self-assessment screening questionnaire, as soon as possible in the surgical pathway, in order to inform SDM, risk prediction and optimisation | • Electronic preoperative assessment tools can be developed and utilized quickly and efficiently, but care should be taken to ensure digital equality of access • Patients can then be triaged. Those identified as high risk can benefit from early preoperative assessment in a high-risk shared decision-making clinic | • • QIPP Digital Technology, NHS Networks. Online preoperative screening solutions. Published online 2012. |
| Preoperative assessment clinic | All patients who are likely to undergo surgery and/or anesthetic sedation should undergo formal preoperative assessment prior to the day admission | • Referrals to PreOperative Assessment Services (POAS) should include co-morbidities, recent results, COVID-19 status, and additional considerations deemed amenable to optimisation (smoking, alcohol intake, obesity, chronic pain) •Implement screening tools to identify clinically important conditions (e.g., sleep-disordered breathing, frailty, cognitive impairment) • Supply patients with information regarding procedure risk and recovery •For older patients consider Comprehensive Geriatric Assessment and optimisation and the Perioperative care of older people programme •Assess suitability for day case surgery •Record full social history, including care responsibilities for others •POAS should agree on service measures and robust clinical audit, to facilitate service improvement and minimize late cancelation | • • • • • • • |
| Risk evaluation and enhanced care patient selection | POAS should include consideration of preoperative referral to critical and surgical high risk care | • Use a locally agreed, validated risk model • > 1% 30-day mortality risk should trigger referral to enhanced postoperative care • > 5% 30-day mortality risk should trigger referral to postoperative critical care • > 10% 30-day mortality risk should trigger consideration of preoperative critical care optimisation •Patients who are planned for critical care admission should be offered a preoperative orientation visit • High risk patients should be discussed with surgeons to further inform SDM and optimisation | • • • Protopapa KL, Simpson JC, Smith NCE, Moonesinghe SR. Development and validation of the Surgical Outcome Risk Tool (SORT). |
| COVID-19 considerations | Where possible surgery should be avoided until 7-weeks after COVID-19 infection and/or if symptoms persist | • Decision to avoid surgery should account for increased complication risk associated with infection, and should involve the patient, surgeon and perioperative physician • Review medicines used to treat COVID-19, accounting for their implications for immune function • If COVID-19 symptoms are persistent, consider alternative diagnoses, including long COVID-19 and/or lung cancer | • COVIDSurg Collaborative, GlobalSurg Collaborative. Timing of surgery following SARS- CoV-2 infection: an international prospective cohort study. • Greenland JR, Michelow MD, Wang L, London MJ. COVID-19 Infection: Implications for Perioperative and Critical Care Physicians. • National Institute for Health and Care Excellence. COVID-19 rapid guideline: managing the long-term effects of COVID-19. Published online December 18, 2020. Accessed January 21, 2021. |
| Co-morbidity management | Patients should be assessed for implications of co-morbidity on functional capacity and risk assessment. Where possible, optimisation of co-morbid conditions should begin as soon as possible in the preoperative pathway | • Specific consideration should be made in the presence of diabetes mellitus, endocrine disease, hypertension, coronary artery disease, cardiac arrhythmia, anaemia, heart failure, lung disease, renal or liver impairment, sleep disordered breathing, implantable pacemakers/ defibrillators, opioids, learning disability, autism, cognitive impairment, mental health problems, chronic pain •Balanced diet, weight management, smoking cessation, alcohol moderation and exercise should be assessed, and positive lifestyle changes recommended | • • • • Surgery and Opioids: |
| Functional capacity assessment | Early functional capacity and physical fitness assessment can lead to preoperative improvements, associated with reduced postoperative complications | • Use validated screening tools such as Duke Activity Status Index, Godin-Shephard Leisure Time Exercise Questionnaire or the International Physical Activity Questionnaire • Patients undergoing high-risk procedures, those with self-reported or subjectively assessed reduced exercise capacity should undertake an objective assessment • Cardiopulmonary exercise testing is the gold standard •Where CPET is unavailable, consider 6-min walk test, incremental shuttle walk test, one-minute-sit-to-stand-test, timed up and go test | • |
| Exercise interventions | All patients should be advised that improving their physical fitness reduces their risk of postoperative complications, can reduce length of hospital stay and improve quality of life | • Where medically fit to undertake exercise patient should be advised that measurable fitness gains can be made in as little as 2-weeks • Based on functional capacity assessment, interventions can be categorized as universal (low risk), targeted (intermediate risk) or specialist – high risk • Universal exercise should include reference to the United Kingdom Chief Medical Officer guidance •Targeted exercise should be prescribed by a suitably qualified professional •Specialist exercise should be prescribed and supervised by a suitably qualified professional •Exercise should consist of combined aerobic and resistance, however if resources are limited aerobic exercise should be prioritized | • • • • |
| Mental health and cognitive assessment and preparation | All patients should undergo a psychometric and cognitive screening using a validated tool as early as possible within the preoperative pathway | • Patients with suspected cognitive concerns should complete a validated assessment tool such as the Montreal Cognitive Assessment • Psychological distress may be detected using Patient-Health Questionnaire 9, Generalised Anxiety Disorder 7, or Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale • According to level of risk patients should be signposted to widely available online resources, referred to local community services or if high risk, patients should be referred to a clinical or health psychologist for formal evaluation and support | • • • • • |
| Nutrition assessment and optimisation | All patients should be screened for risk of malnutrition, as early as possible, using a validated tool | • Validated malnutrition screening tools include Nutritional Risk Screening and Malnutrition Universal Screening Tool •Patients screened at risk should undergo a formalized assessment by a registered dietician or physician with interest in clinical nutrition • All preoperative patients should be signposted to widely available dietary advice • Targeted interventions such as oral nutrition supplementation should be dictated by severity of risk and determined by a registered dietician based upon principles outlined in the Macmillan-RCoA-NIHR Prehabilitation Guidance • Specialist interventions such as enteral tube feeding should be based upon multi-disciplinary team discussion | • • • • |
| Preoperative group education | All patients should be invited for an in-person or remotely delivered group surgery school | • Surgery school should contain information on the likely course of the planned admission, “what to expect,” surgical preparation and principles of prehabilitation, and supporting behavior change •Patients report preference for “live” events, with the ability to ask questions, rather than recorded advice • Clinicians should consider and ameliorate digital and socio-economic health inequality as some groups are less likely to attend surgical school | • Manchester University Hospital surgery school video: • Fecher-Jones I, Grimmett C, Edwards MR, et al. Development and evaluation of a novel preoperative surgery school and behavioral change intervention for patients undergoing elective major surgery: Fit-4-Surgery School. |
| Waiting list clinical surveillance and support | Patients should be encouraged to regard waiting times as “preparation time.” | • Where possible, following POAS, date of surgery should not be changed •Delayed high risk patients or procedures should receive additional clinical oversight and repeat POAS where deemed necessary • A point of contact in the perioperative team should be identified to the patient and accessible by email or telephone •Additional support may be necessary for individuals from more deprived communities, to avoid widening health inequalities | |
| Emergency surgery – preoperative assessment and optimisation | Local emergency surgical care pathways should be developed, consistent with national recommendations. These will include prompt assessment and preoperative optimisation to avoid delay | • Emergency surgery pathways should be planned in advance, with particular consideration for risk assessment, high care referral, and COVID-19 testing and management • Emergency surgery specific risk assessment tools should be used to guide consent, postoperative high care referral and SDM prior to surgery | • |
Summary guidance for the recovery of elective surgical services following the pandemic
Adapted from ‘Preoperative Assessment and Optimisation for Adult Surgery including consideration of COVID-19 and its implications’
Additional resources are primarily United Kingdom initiatives but are widely available on the internet
This summary table is not intended to be comprehensive, please refer to the original guidance at:
https://cpoc.org.uk/preoperative-assessment-and-optimisation-adult-surgery
Accessed on 14th October 2021