Impact of a trimodal prehabilitation program on functional recovery after colorectal cancer surgery: a pilot study
McGill University · McGill University Health Centre
Abstract
Patients undergoing colorectal cancer resections are at risk for delayed recovery. Prehabilitation aims to enhance functional capacity preoperatively for better toleration of surgery and to facilitate recovery. The authors previously demonstrated the limited impact of a prehabilitation program using exercise alone. They propose an expanded trimodal prehabilitation program that adds nutritional counseling, protein supplementation, and anxiety reduction to a moderate exercise program. This study aimed to estimate the impact of this trimodal program on the recovery of functional capacity compared with standard surgical care.
Consecutive patients were enrolled in this pre- and postintervention study over a 23-month period. The postoperative recovery for 42 consecutive patients enrolled in the prehabilitation program was compared with that of 45 patients assessed before the intervention began. The primary outcome was functional walking capacity (6-min walk test [6MWT]). The secondary outcomes included self-reported physical activity (CHAMPS questionnaire) and health-related quality of life (SF-36). Data are expressed as mean ± standard deviation or median (interquartile range [IQR]) and were analyzed using Chi-square and Student's t test. All p values lower than 0.05 were considered significant.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 17.41
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 81
Authors
13Topics & keywords
- Prehabilitation
- Medicine
- Anesthesiology
- Physical therapy
- Abdominal surgery
- Interquartile range
- Body mass index
- Colorectal surgery
- Zero hunger