| Literature DB >> 35251396 |
Xiaoqiang Xue1, Dong Wang1, Zhigang Ji1, Yi Xie1.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Enhanced recovery after surgery (ERAS) is a set of perioperative interventions to alleviate patients' stress response and complications, and to promote rehabilitation. Data on its implementation in renal cell carcinoma treated by laparoscopic partial nephrectomy are lacking. AIM: To evaluate the prospect of application of ERAS in laparoscopic partial nephrectomy based on real-world data.Entities:
Keywords: enhanced recovery after surgery; laparoscopic partial nephrectomy; randomized controlled trial; renal cell carcinoma
Year: 2021 PMID: 35251396 PMCID: PMC8886469 DOI: 10.5114/wiitm.2021.108216
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Wideochir Inne Tech Maloinwazyjne ISSN: 1895-4588 Impact factor: 1.195
Baseline characteristics and homogeneity test results of the two groups
| Category | Traditional group (mean ± SD) | ERAS group (mean ± SD) | χ2/ | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age [years] | 55.97 ±12.39 | 53.70 ±10.69 | 0.70 | 0.486 |
| Gender: | 0.01 | 0.919 | ||
| Male | 20 | 21 | ||
| Female | 9 | 10 | ||
| BMI | 25.24 ±3.28 | 26.63 ±3.84 | –1.494 | 0.141 |
| Body temperature [°C] | 36.37 ±0.38 | 36.13 ±0.35 | 0.411 | 0.683 |
| Heart rate [beats per minute] | 80.14 ±10.41 | 76.77 ±9.32 | 1.312 | 0.195 |
| Systolic pressure [mm Hg] | 132.52 ±13.93 | 137.70 ±15.86 | –1.332 | 0.188 |
| Diastolic pressure [mm Hg] | 80.24 ±7.71 | 78.70 ±11.05 | 0.621 | 0.537 |
| Respiratory rate [beats per minute] | 18.17 ±1.99 | 18.30 ±1.62 | –0.381 | 0.705 |
| Highest education level: | 0.191 | 0.849[ | ||
| Illiterate: | 0 | 2 | ||
| Elementary school | 3 | 2 | ||
| Junior high school | 1 | 3 | ||
| Senior high school/equivalent | 14 | 10 | ||
| Bachelor’s degree | 5 | 7 | ||
| Postgraduate or above | 2 | 2 | ||
| Unknown | 4 | 5 | ||
| Previous medical history: | 0.098 | 0.754 | ||
| None | 12 | 14 | ||
| Mild illness | 17 | 17 | ||
| Leukocyte: | N.A. | 1.000[ | ||
| Normal range | 28 | 30 | ||
| Abnormal range | 1 | 1 | ||
| Preoperative hemoglobin: | 0.308 | 0.579 | ||
| Normal range | 29 | 30 | ||
| Abnormal range | 0 | 1 | ||
| Preoperative creatinine: | N.A. | 1.000[ | ||
| Normal range | 29 | 30 | ||
| Abnormal range | 0 | 1 | ||
| Total bilirubin: | 0.308 | 0.579 | ||
| Normal range | 26 | 29 | ||
| Abnormal range | 3 | 2 | ||
| Activated partial thromboplastin time: | N.A. | 1.000[ | ||
| Normal range | 28 | 29 | ||
| Abnormal range | 1 | 2 | ||
| Prothrombin time: | 0.001 | 0.975 | ||
| Normal range | 27 | 30 | ||
| Abnormal range | 2 | 1 | ||
ERAS – enhanced recovery after surgery, N.A. – not applicable
Wilcoxon test
results of Fisher’s exact test.
Perioperative management protocols for patients who have undergone laparoscopic partial nephrectomy
| Management | Routine group in other report (9) | Traditional group | ERAS group |
|---|---|---|---|
| Preoperative patient education | Routine preoperative medical knowledge related education | Regular medical knowledge conveyed in a question-and-answer way, no further discussion if not required | Multimedia education on the background of ERAS, plans were thoroughly explained and suggestions for promoting recovery were made |
| Preoperative fasting | Fasting starts from 12 h before surgery, water deprivation starts 4 h before surgery | Preoperative fasting starting from 12 h before surgery, preoperative water deprivation starting from 6 h before surgery | Semi-fluid food was accessible 6 h before surgery, water deprivation starting from 2 h before surgery. 400 ml of carbohydrate liquid (12.5%) was given to those without diabetes 2 h before surgery |
| Bowel preparation | With soap and water | Polyethylene glycol solution as laxatives | No enema |
| Pre-anesthesia medication | Not mentioned | Given as needed | Avoid long-acting sedative drugs |
| General anesthesia plan | Not mentioned | Intravenous anesthesia | Intravenous anesthesia plus nerve block |
| Standard anesthesia protocol | Not mentioned | Intraoperative intravenous opioids for pain control, using low-tidal volume and high-frequency ventilation | Using short-acting opioids, preventing hypoxemia and hypothermia, controlling intraoperative blood glucose and blood pressure, infusing blood products in time, using low-tidal volume and high-frequency ventilation |
| Postoperative pain control | Postoperative on-demand analgesia | No preventive analgesia | Preventive analgesia: flurbiprofen axetil injection |
| Ileus prevention | Not mentioned | Not stressed | Gum chewing, early ambulation, controlled rehydration, and fewer opioids |
| Nausea and emesis prevention | Not mentioned | On-demand | Using ondansetron in patients with risk factors such as female gender, history of motion sickness, and non-smoker, if there were more than 2 risk factors, multimodal antiemetic therapy was used |
| Postoperative mobilization | Strictly stay in bed for about 7 days after the operation, or even longer | In the premise of safety, they were encouraged to start walking once they were physically prepared, usually on postoperative day 3–4 | Encouraging patients to mobilize limbs and ankles early, when there are no risks of bleeding, they were required to start walking on postoperative day 2 |
| Urinary catheter removal | 3–5 days after surgery | 2–3 days after surgery | As soon as the patients could walk to the restroom |
| Drainage tube management | 5–6 days after surgery | 3–4 days after surgery | Under the premise of safety, no perirenal drainage tube was placed |
| Postoperative fluid infusion | 2500–3000 ml is routinely used for 3–4 days after the operation | 2,500–3,000 ml fluid given daily after surgery, lasting for 3–4 days | Controlled infusion, resume a normal diet as soon as possible |
| Postoperative feeding | Drinking after exhausting, then gradual transition from liquid to general food | Food and water are forbidden until anal exsufflation | Liquids were allowed 6 h after surgery, semi-fluid food started on postoperative day 1 |
PCA – patient-controlled analgesia; postoperative day 1 means the day after the operation day, and so on.
Results of different clinical management of the two groups
| Category | Traditional group(mean ± SD) | ERAS group (mean ± SD) | Traditional group | ERAS group | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Postoperative length of stay [days] | 5.65 ±1.14 | 5.61 ±1.17 | 0.141 | 0.889 | 6.17 ±1.08 | 6.08 ±1.24 | 0.182 | 0.785 |
| Medical costs (converted to U.S. dollars | 3477.94 ±576.66 | 3581.73 ±672.09 | –0.64 | 0.525 | 3522.18 ±621.22 | 3710.12 ±581.26 | 0.117 | 0.657 |
| First-time drinking [h] | 28.52 ±17.26 | 28.15 ±17.10 | 0.175 | 0.862 | 29.75 ±11.33 | 29.15 ±13.20 | 0.225 | 0.982 |
| Recovery of anal exsufflation [h] | 35.36 ±17.36 | 34.43 ±21.26 | 0.187 | 0.852 | 37.42 ±13.36 | 38.15 ±16.94 | 0.219 | 0.789 |
| First-time ambulation [h] | 53.35 ±16.15 | 42.35 ±15.31 | 2.743 | 0.008 | 55.25 ±20.12 | 42.31 ±12.31 | 2.545 | 0.012 |
| Time of first intake of fluid food [h] | 41.17 ±16.39 | 38.57 ±18.19 | 0.581 | 0.563 | 42.17 ±18.17 | 39.92 ±16.26 | 0.651 | 0.612 |
| Time of first intake of semi-fluid food [h] | 53.14 ± 18.14 | 50.30 ±21.35 | 0.565 | 0.574 | 49.42 ±15.14 | 47.15 ±12.98 | 0.547 | 0.417 |
The average exchange rate of U.S. dollar to local currency in November 2018 was adopted, 6.9351 Chinese Yuan equaled 1 U.S. dollar.
Groups only include patients over 65 years.
Scoring system in pain, nausea, and vomiting evaluation
| Category | Definition |
|---|---|
| Pain score: | |
| 0 | Painless |
| 1–3 | Mild pain that would not affect sleep |
| 4–6 | Moderate pain |
| 7–9 | Severe pain that leads to insomnia or sudden waking |
| 10 | Extreme, unbearable pain |
| Nausea score: | |
| 0 | None |
| 1 | Mild (none at rest, slight during exercise) |
| 2 | Moderate (occasionally occurs at rest) |
| 3 | Severe (persistent nausea at rest) |
| Vomiting score: | |
| 0 | None |
| 1 | Mild (1–2 times/day) |
| 2 | Moderate (3–5 times/day) |
| 3 | Severe (> 6 times/day) |
Figure 1Line charts of marginal means of NRS score of pain and nausea between ERAS group and traditional group. The above line charts indicate the NRS score of pain at rest and ankle movement, as well as postoperative nausea, showing a tendency of changing with time
Evaluations of pain at rest and ankle movement, nausea scores in both ERAS and traditional groups
| Time [h] | Group | Pain at rest | Pain at ankle movement | Nausea | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Multiple comparisons | R.M. ANOVA | Multiple comparisons | R.M. ANOVA | Multiple comparisons | R.M. ANOVA | ||||||||
| Score |
| Results | Score |
| Results | Score |
| Results | |||||
| 2 | Trad | 3.09 ±2.83 | 3.44 | 0.001 | Fgroup = 5.25 | 2.86 ±2.85 | 2.43 | 0.016 | Fgroup = 5.92 | 0.65 ±1.12 | 2.82 | 0.006 | Fgroup = 3.92 |
| ERAS | 1.30 ±1.38 | 1.50 ±1.61 | 0.06 ±0.24 | ||||||||||
| 4 | Trad | 3.17 ±2.98 | 3.63 | < 0.001 | 3.05 ±2.92 | 3.10 | 0.002 | 0.53 ±0.87 | 2.24 | 0.027 | |||
| ERAS | 1.20 ±1.47 | 1.30 ±1.46 | 0.06 ±0.24 | ||||||||||
| 6 | Trad | 2.61 ±2.19 | 2.08 | 0.038 | 2.43 ±2.13 | 2.28 | 0.024 | 0.59 ±0.87 | 1.96 | 0.052 | |||
| ERAS | 1.45 ±1.50 | 1.05 ±1.36 | 0.18 ±0.53 | ||||||||||
| 8 | Trad | 2.04 ±1.77 | 1.29 | 0.198 | 1.90 ±1.76 | 1.35 | 0.178 | 0.18 ±0.39 | 0.39 | 0.697 | |||
| ERAS | 1.40 ±1.57 | 0.90 ±1.07 | 0.12 ±0.49 | ||||||||||
| 12 | Trad | 2.26 ±1.89 | 2.20 | 0.029 | 2.00 ±1.76 | 1.93 | 0.055 | 0.41 ±0.87 | 1.78 | 0.007 | |||
| ERAS | 1.15 ±1.09 | 0.80 ±0.95 | 0.06 ±0.24 | ||||||||||
| 24 | Trad | 1.87 ±1.98 | 0.70 | 0.483 | 2.19 ±2.48 | 1.98 | 0.049 | ||||||
| ERAS | 1.15 ±1.23 | 0.85 ±1.09 | |||||||||||
| 48 | Trad | 0.83 ±0.98 | –0.47 | 0.639 | 1.05 ±1.53 | < 0.01 | 0.997 | ||||||
| ERAS | 1.00 ±1.21 | 1.05 ±1.15 | |||||||||||
| 72 | Trad | 0.57 ±1.21 | –0.50 | 0.620 | |||||||||
| ERAS | 0.65 ±1.18 | ||||||||||||
Trad – traditional group, ERAS – ERAS group, R.M. ANOVA – analysis of variance of repeated measurements.