Conference Coverage

Strategies to reduce colorectal surgery complications


 

REPORTING FROM MISS

– Colorectal surgery is rife with potential complications, but there are steps that surgeons can take to improve outcomes, and factors to consider to reduce complications. These strategies and considerations were the focus of a talk by Matthew G. Mutch, MD, at the Annual Minimally Invasive Surgery Symposium by Global Academy for Medical Education.

Prehabilitation

The approach to improve outcomes can begin with prehabilitation – preparing the patient for the difficult process of surgery. “If somebody is going to fight a 15-round heavyweight bout, they train for 6 or 8 weeks before a fight. Why not bring that concept to surgery?” said Dr. Mutch, chief of colon and rectal surgery at the Washington University, St. Louis.

Prehabilitation can include lifestyle changes, such as quitting smoking, but can also incorporate aerobic and/or resistance exercise, dietary counseling and protein supplementation, anxiety reduction, and medical education to prepare the patient for the challenges ahead. “Preoperatively, we try to identify factors to see if we can make meaningful lifestyle changes, because that’s really the grassroots level where a lot of this [improvement in outcomes] is going to occur,” said Dr. Mutch.

Frailty

Frailty is a factor driving complications in colorectal surgery. A meta-analysis of 20 studies showed that frailty and prefrailty were associated with worse all-cause mortality during follow-up among older cancer patients. More striking, it showed that frail patients were nearly five times more likely to be intolerant of cancer treatment (odds ratio, 4.86) and more likely to experience postoperative complications (30-day hazard ratio, 3.19) (Ann Oncol. 2015;26[6]:1091-1101).

Pages

Recommended Reading

AGA Guideline: Preventing Crohn’s recurrence after resection
MDedge Internal Medicine
Novel robotic camera photographs colon
MDedge Internal Medicine
Anal dysplasia surveillance called into question
MDedge Internal Medicine
Sooner is better than later for acute UC surgery
MDedge Internal Medicine
Statins might protect against rectal anastomotic leaks
MDedge Internal Medicine
Prior resections increase anastomotic leak risk in Crohn’s
MDedge Internal Medicine
Comprehensive guidelines released for enhanced colorectal surgery recovery
MDedge Internal Medicine
Enhanced recovery protocols after colectomy safely cut LOS
MDedge Internal Medicine
Emergent colectomies for ulcerative colitis declining
MDedge Internal Medicine
ERAS pathway can cut postdischarge opioid use
MDedge Internal Medicine