Development of an Enhanced Recovery After Surgery Program in Ventral Hernia

Author:

Ewing John K.1ORCID,Cassling Kyle E.2,Hanneman Michael A.1ORCID,Broucek Joseph R.1,Raymond Britany L.3,Pierce Richard A.1,Geiger Timothy M.1,Bradley Joel F.1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Surgery, Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Nashville, TN, USA

2. Department of Surgery, The Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center, Columbus, OH, USA

3. Department of Anesthesiology, Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Nashville, TN, USA

Abstract

Background Enhanced Recovery After Surgery (ERAS) programs have spread after initial success in colorectal surgery decreasing length of stay (LOS) and decreasing opioid consumption. Adoption of ERAS specifically for ventral hernia patients remains in evolution. This study presents the development and implementation of an ERAS pathway for ventral hernia. Methods A multidisciplinary team met weekly over 6 months to develop an ERAS pathway specific to ventral hernia patients. 75 process components and outcome measures were included, spanning multiple phases of care: Preoperative-Clinic, Preoperative Day of Surgery (DOS), Intraoperative, and Postoperative. Preoperative components included education and physiologic optimization. Pain control across phases of care focuses on nonopioid, multimodal analgesia. Postoperatively, the pathway emphasizes early diet advancement, early mobilization, and minimization of IV fluids. We compared compliance and outcome measures between a Pre Go-Live (PGL) period (9/1/2020-8/30/2021) and After Go-live (AGL) period (5/12/2022-5/19/2023). Results There were 125 patients in the PGL group and 169 patients in the AGL group. Overall, ERAS compliance increased from 73.9% to 82.9% after implementation. Length of stay decreased from an average of 2.27 days PGL to 1.92 days AGL. Finally, the average daily postoperative opioid usage decreased from 25.4 to 13.5 MME after the implementation. Discussion Enhanced Recovery After Surgery can be successfully applied to the care of hernia patients with improvements in LOS and decreased opioid consumption. Institutional support and multidisciplinary cooperation were key for the development of such a program.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

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