Pragmatic Prehabilitation for Colorectal Surgery

  • STATUS
    Recruiting
  • participants needed
    140
  • sponsor
    University of Calgary
Updated on 16 February 2024
anxiety
enhanced recovery after surgery
rectal cancer
bowel disease
bowel diseases
deep breathing exercises

Summary

Colorectal surgery is a common surgery for the treatment of colon and rectal cancers as well as other bowel diseases. Recovery from colorectal surgery is difficult because of the many potential negative side effects. These side effects include surgical complications, infections, and long hospital stays. It usually takes several months for patients to recover the strength required to return to their typical daily activities.

The Enhanced Recovery After Surgery program was established in Alberta in 2013 and uses several strategies to improve short-term patient recovery, including earlier discharge from hospital. Whether the ERAS program also improves long-term patient recovery, including quality of life and return to activities of daily living, is unclear. Whether the ERAS program would benefit from the addition of a prehabilitation element is unclear.

Prehabilitation programs are designed to use the waiting period before colorectal surgery to better prepare patients emotionally and physically for their operation. To date, successful prehabilitation programs have used a personalized care strategy where each patient is provided specific care instructions by healthcare professionals to meet their unique exercise, nutrition, and psychological needs. This prehabilitation strategy has been criticized for not being sustainable in our healthcare system.

A new prehabilitation program in response to this criticism is proposed. The prehabilitation program will be conducted in a more sustainable way by offering the program as a group class with a home-based component. ERAS patients at the Peter Lougheed Center are already offered a group class as part of the standard ERAS program. The prehabilitation class will be an extension of this group class that provides general nutrition, exercise, and anxiety-reduction/relaxation strategies to help patients prepare physically and emotionally for their operation. At this class, patients will learn to eat well, practice deep breathing exercises for relaxation, perform simple functional exercises, and to walk for exercise before their surgery. The surgical experience and outcomes of patients who received the additional prehabilitation care will be compared to those who received ERAS care only.

The overall goal of the study is to better understand how ERAS supports recovery after surgery and whether a prehabilitation program offers any additional benefits to the ERAS program currently in place.

Details
Condition Proctology, Prehabilitation, Enhanced Recovery After Surgery
Age 18years - 100years
Treatment Fitbit, Prehab, ERAS
Clinical Study IdentifierNCT04247776
SponsorUniversity of Calgary
Last Modified on16 February 2024

Eligibility

Yes No Not Sure

Inclusion Criteria

years of age or older
elective colorectal surgery for primary disease under ERAS care at PLC
have at least two weeks to participate before their scheduled surgery (i.e., surgery will NOT be rescheduled based on participation in this program)
are able to walk
sufficient fluency in English to complete questionnaires

Exclusion Criteria

emergent surgery
dairy allergy
galactosemia
strict vegans
presence of a condition that could compromise the safety of the patient or adherence to the program, including
Co-morbid medical, physical, and/or mental conditions including dementia, disabling orthopedic and neuromuscular disease, psychosis
Severe cardiopulmonary abnormalities, sepsis, and end-stage organ disease: cardiac failure (New York Heart Association classes III-IV), chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, renal failure (creatinine > 115mol/l), hepatic failure (liver aminotranferases >50% the normal range)
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