reviewAnnals of SurgeryAug 1, 2008Closed access

Evidence-Based Surgical Care and the Evolution of Fast-Track Surgery

Rigshospitalet

Indexed incrossref

Abstract

Objective

To assess, synthesize, and discuss implementation of “fast-track” recovery programs. Data Sources: Medline MBASE (January 1966–May 2007) and the Cochrane library (January 1966–May 2007) were searched using the following keywords: fast-track, enhanced recovery, accelerated rehabilitation, and multimodal and perioperative care. In addition, the synthesis on the many specific interventions and organizational and implementation issues were based on data published within the past 5 years from major anesthesiological and surgical journals, using systematic reviews where appropriate instead of multiple references of original work. Data Synthesis: Based on an increasing amount of multinational, multicenter cohort studies, randomized studies, and meta-analyses, the concept of the “fast-track methodology” has uniformly provided a major enhancement in recovery leading to decreased hospital stay and with an apparent reduction in medical morbidity but unaltered “surgery-specific” morbidity in a variety of procedures. However, despite being based on a combination of evidence-based unimodal principles of care, recent surveys have demonstrated slow adaptation and implementation of the fast-track methodology.

Conclusion

Multimodal evidence-based care within the fast-track methodology significantly enhances postoperative recovery and reduces morbidity, and should therefore be more widely adopted. Further improvement is expected by future integration of minimal invasive surgery, pharmacological stress-reduction, and effective multimodal, nonopioid analgesia. The integration of unimodality evidence-based perioperative care principles into a multimodal “fast-track” rehabilitation program is now well documented to accelerate postoperative recovery and decrease hospital stay. Therefore, this multidisciplinary effort should be more widely adopted.

Citation impact

1,784
total citations
FWCI
40.70
Percentile
100%
References
201
Citations per year

Authors

2

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Medicine
  • Fast track
  • Rehabilitation
  • MEDLINE
  • Multimodal therapy
  • Perioperative medicine
  • Evidence-based medicine
  • Perioperative
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