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| The role and effect of multimodal prehabilitation before major abdominal surgery: a systemic review and meta-analysis |
| Jain SR, Kandarpa VL, Yaow CYL, Tan WJ, Ho LML, Sivarajah SS, Ng JL, Chong CXZ, Aw DKL, Foo FJ, Koh FHX |
| World Journal of Surgery 2023 Jan;47(1):86-102 |
| systematic review |
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BACKGROUND: For patients undergoing abdominal surgery, multimodal prehabilitation, including nutrition and exercise interventions, aims to optimize their preoperative physical and physiological capacity. This meta-analysis aims to explore the impact of multimodal prehabilitation on surgical and functional outcomes of abdominal surgery. METHODS: Medline, Embase and CENTRAL were searched for articles about multimodal prehabilitation in major abdominal surgery. Primary outcomes were postoperative complications with a Clavien-Dindo score >= 3, and functional outcomes, measured by the 6-Minute Walking Test (6MWT). Secondary outcome measures included the quality-of-life measures. Pooled risk ratio (RR) and 95% confidence interval (CI) were estimated, with DerSimonian and Laird random effects used to account for heterogeneity. RESULTS: Twenty-five studies were included, analysing 4,210 patients across 13 trials and 12 observational studies. Patients undergoing prehabilitation had significantly fewer overall complications (RR 0.879, 95% CI 0.781 to 0.989, p = 0.034). There were no significant differences in the rates of wound infection, anastomotic leak and duration of hospitalization. The 6MWT improved preoperatively in patients undergoing prehabilitation (SMD 33.174, 95% CI 12.674 to 53.673, p = 0.005), but there were no significant differences in the 6MWT at 4 weeks (SMD 30.342, 95% CI -2.707 to 63.391, p = 0.066) and 8 weeks (SMD 24.563, 95% CI -6.77 to 55.900, p = 0.104) postoperatively. CONCLUSIONS: As preoperative patient optimization shifts towards an interdisciplinary approach, evidence from this meta-analysis shows that multimodal prehabilitation improves the preoperative functional capacity and reduces postoperative complication rates, suggesting its potential in effectively optimizing the abdominal surgery patient. However, there is a large degree of heterogenicity between the prehabilitation interventions between included articles; hence results should be interpreted with caution.
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