Prehabilitation before general surgery: Worth the effort?

Author:

Kovoor Joshua G1234,Nann Silas D45,Chambers Courtney23,Mishra Kritika23,Goel Sahil23,Thompson Isabella56,Koh Dong23,Litwin Peter234,Bacchi Stephen1234,Harford Philip J23,Stretton Brandon1234ORCID,Gupta Aashray K145

Affiliation:

1. Discipline of Surgery, The University of Adelaide, Adelaide, SA, Australia

2. The Queen Elizabeth Hospital, Adelaide, SA, Australia

3. Royal Adelaide Hospital, Adelaide, SA, Australia

4. Health and Information, Adelaide, SA, Australia

5. Gold Coast University Hospital, Gold Coast, QLD, Australia

6. Bond University, Gold Coast, QLD, Australia

Abstract

Prehabilitation, or interventions before surgery aimed at improving preoperative health and postoperative outcomes, has various forms. Although it may confer benefit to patients undergoing general surgery, this is not certain. Furthermore, although it may yield a net monetary gain, it is also likely to require substantial monetary and non-monetary investment. The impact of prehabilitation is highly variable and dependent on multiple factors. Physical function and pulmonary outcomes are likely to be improved by most forms of prehabilitation involving physical and multimodal exercise programmes. However, other surgical outcomes have demonstrated mixed results from prehabilitation. Within this issue, the measures used for evaluating baseline patient biopsychosocial health are important, and collecting sufficient data to accurately inform patient-centred prehabilitation programmes is only possible through thorough clinical and laboratory investigation and synthesised metrics such as cardiopulmonary exercise testing. Although a multimodal approach to prehabilitation is the current gold standard, societal factors may affect engagement with programmes that require a significant in-person activity. However, this is weighed against the substantial financial and non-financial investment that accompanies many programmes. The overall effectiveness and optimal mode of intervention across the discipline of general surgery remains unclear, and further research is needed to prove prehabilitation’s full worth.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Medical–Surgical Nursing,Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine,Surgery

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