High adherence to enhanced recovery pathway independently reduces major morbidity and mortality rates after colorectal surgery: a reappraisal of the iCral2 and iCral3 multicenter prospective studies

Author:

Catarci Marco1,Ruffo Giacomo2,Viola Massimo Giuseppe3,Pirozzi Felice4,Delrio Paolo5,Borghi Felice6,Garulli Gianluca7,Marini Pierluigi8,Baldazzi Gianandrea9,Scatizzi Marco10,

Affiliation:

1. General Surgery Unit, Sandro Pertini Hospital, ASL Roma 2

2. General Surgery Unit, IRCCS Sacro Cuore Don Calabria Hospital, Negrar di Valpolicella (VR)

3. General Surgery Unit, Cardinale G. Panico Hospital, Tricase (LE)

4. General Surgery Unit, ASL Napoli 2 Nord, Pozzuoli (NA)

5. Colorectal Surgical Oncology, Istituto Nazionale per lo Studio e la Cura dei Tumori, “Fondazione Giovanni Pascale IRCCS-Italia,” Napoli

6. General and Oncologic Surgery Unit, Department of Surgery, Santa Croce e Carle Hospital, Cuneo

7. General Surgery Unit, Infermi Hospital, Rimini

8. General and Emergency Surgery Unit, San Camillo-Forlanini Hospital, Roma

9. General Surgery Unit, ASST Ovest Milanese, Nuovo Ospedale di Legnano, Legnano (MI)

10. General Surgery Unit, Santa Maria Annunziata Hospital, Firenze

Abstract

Background: Enhanced recovery after surgery (ERAS) offers lower overall morbidity rates and shorter hospital stay after colorectal surgery (CRS); high adherence rates to ERAS may significantly reduce major morbidity (MM), anastomotic leakage (AL), and mortality (M) rates as well. Methods: Prospective enrollment of patients submitted to elective CRS with anastomosis in two separate 18- and 12-month periods among 78 surgical centers in Italy from 2019 to 2021. Adherence to ERAS pathway items was measured upon explicit criteria in every case. After univariate analysis, independent predictors of primary endpoints (MM, AL, and M rates) were identified through logistic regression analyses, presenting odds ratios (OR) and 95% confidence intervals. Results: An institutional ERAS status was declared by 48 out of 78 (61.5%) participating centers. The median overall adherence to ERAS was 75%. Among 8,359 patients included in both studies, MM, AL, and M rates were 6.3%, 4.4%, and 1.0%, respectively. Several patient-related and treatment-related variables showed independently higher rates for primary endpoints: male gender, American Society of Anesthesiologists class III, neoadjuvant treatment, perioperative steroids, intra- and/or postoperative blood transfusions, length of the operation >180’, surgery for malignancy. On the other hand, ERAS adherence >85% independently reduced MM (OR, 0.91) and M (OR, 0.25) rates, whereas no mechanical bowel preparation independently reduced AL (OR, 0.68) rates. Conclusions: Among other patient- or treatment-related variables, ERAS adherence >85% independently reduced MM and M rates, whereas no mechanical bowel preparation independently reduced AL rates after CRS.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

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