Enhanced Recovery after Surgery recommendations that most impact patient care: A multi‐institutional, multidiscipline analysis in the United States

Author:

Cochran Allyson R.1ORCID,Shaw George2,Shue‐McGuffin Katherine3,Elias Kevin4,Vrochides Dionisios5

Affiliation:

1. Carolinas Center for Surgical Outcomes Science Wake Forest University School of Medicine Atrium Health Charlotte North Carolina USA

2. Department of Public Health Sciences School of Data Science University of North Carolina at Charlotte Charlotte North Carolina USA

3. School of Nursing University of North Carolina at Charlotte Charlotte North Carolina USA

4. Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology Brigham and Women's Hospital Harvard Medical School Boston Massachusetts USA

5. Division of Abdominal Transplantation Carolinas Medical Center Wake Forest University School of Medicine Atrium Health Charlotte North Carolina USA

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundCompliance to the entire Enhanced Recovery after Surgery (ERAS) protocol improves surgical recovery, where higher compliance improves outcomes. However, specific items may predict improved recovery more than others. Studies have evaluated the impact of individual ERAS recommendations though they are either single center, not based in the United States (US), or focus on colorectal procedures only. This study aims to evaluate compliance on surgical outcomes in two large healthcare systems in the US across four surgery types.MethodsCompliance to individual recommendations, limited patient characteristics, and outcomes data from two US ERAS Centers of Excellence (CoE) for hepatectomy, pancreatectomy, radical cystectomy, and head and neck (HN) resections were evaluated. Outcomes included 30‐day Clavien–Dindo≥3, readmission, mortality, and length of stay (LOS). Multivariate regressions were performed as appropriate for the data for each surgery type. Clavien≥3 was included to control for severity of complications, and the CoE variable was force‐retained.ResultsA total of 2886 records were analyzed. Controlling for CoE and severity of patient complications, early removal of Foley catheter was associated with significant reductions in LOS in the liver, pancreas, and HN procedures and reductions in complications in the liver and pancreas. Limited use of NG tubes reduced LOS in the pancreas and complications in urology. Oral carbohydrate loading reduced LOS in the pancreas, and patient education reduced mortality in HN patients.ConclusionsThis study reports the effect of ERAS compliance on outcomes, by surgery type, in a multi‐institutional US setting. Future studies should validate these findings and consider surgery‐specific predictive models comprised of individual ERAS recommendations in real‐world applications.

Publisher

Wiley

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