AI Article Synopsis

  • Oesophageal resection can lead to various postoperative complications, and implementing an Enhanced Recovery After Surgery (ERAS) program aims to standardize care and improve recovery times for patients undergoing Ivor Lewis oesophago-gastrectomy.
  • A study compared patients on the ERAS program (75 patients) with those not on it (41 patients) and a pre-implementation group (80 patients), finding that the ERAS group significantly reduced the total length of hospital stay (TLOS) compared to the other two groups.
  • While the ERAS program improved recovery speed, it didn't negatively impact postoperative complication rates or the likelihood of readmission within 30 days, highlighting its effectiveness when supported by a collaborative healthcare team.

Article Abstract

Background: Oesophageal resection is notoriously complicated and produces a cohort of patients prone to postoperative complications. Maintaining quality care demands a systematic approach to patient management yet postoperative recovery after oesophagectomy is often needlessly inefficient, heterogeneous and governed by the idiosyncrasies of the operating surgeon. Enhanced recovery after surgery (ERAS) programmes are now well established in colorectal surgery and here we describe the implementation and effectiveness of an ERAS programme for the postoperative management of Ivor Lewis oesophago-gastrectomy (ILOG).

Methods: An ERAS programme was devised and implemented with the support of a dedicated in-hospital task-force. Three consultant surgeons allocated consecutive patients to the programme (ERAS) and outcomes were compared to consecutive patients not on the ERAS programme (non-ERAS) and a pre-ERAS cohort (pre-ERAS). Principal outcome measures were total length of stay (TLOS), Accordion postoperative complication grade and 30-day readmission rate.

Results: 75 patients were enrolled on the ERAS programme, 41 continued as a non-ERAS cohort and 80 consecutive pre-ERAS patients were identified. A significant improvement in median TLOS was observed in the ERAS group (10 days r.7-58) compared to pre-ERAS (13 days r. 8-57) (p = <0.001) and non-ERAS patients (13 days r.8-42) (p = <0.001). No significant difference in Accordion scores for postoperative complications or 30-day readmission rates were observed.

Discussion: The introduction of an ERAS programme after ILOG can significantly reduce TLOS without jeopardising patient safety or clinical outcomes. The successful introduction of an ERAS programme requires full motivation and support from all team members including the patient.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ijsu.2014.01.015DOI Listing

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