Abstract
Abstract
Background
Uptake of ERAS® pathways for pancreatic surgery have been slow and impacted by low compliance.
Objective
To explore global awareness, perceptions and practice of ERAS® peri-pancreatoduodenectomy (PD).
Methods
A structured, web-based survey (EPSILON) was administered through the ERAS® society and IHPBA membership.
Results
The 140 respondents included predominantly males (86.4%), from Europe (45%), practicing surgery (95%) at academic/teaching hospitals (63.6%) over a period of 10–20 years (38.6%). Most respondents identified themselves as general surgeons (68.6%) with 40.7% reporting an annual PD volume of 20–50 cases, practicing post-PD clinical pathways (37.9%), with 31.4% of respondents auditing their outcomes annually. Reduced medical complications, cost and hospital length of stay, and improved patient satisfaction were perceived benefits of compliance to enhancing-recovery. Multidisciplinary co-ordination was considered the most important factor in the implementation and sustainability of peri-PD ERAS® pathways, while reluctance to change among health care practitioners, difficulties in data collection and audit, lack of administrative support, and recruitment of an ERAS® dedicated nurse were reported to be important barriers.
Conclusions
The EPSILON survey highlighted global clinician perceptions regarding the benefits of compliance to peri-PD ERAS®, the importance of individual components, perceived facilitators and barriers, to the implementation and sustainability of these pathways.
Funder
PanKind, The Australian Pancreatic Cancer Foundation
National Health and Medical Research Council
Flinders Foundation
Flinders University
Cited by
2 articles.
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