预热
医学
随机对照试验
物理疗法
癌症
外科
内科学
作者
Augustinas Baušys,Martynas Lukšta,Giedrė Anglickienė,Vytė Valerija Maneikienė,Marius Kryžauskas,Andrius Rybakovas,Audrius Dulskas,Justas Kuliavas,Eugenijus Stratilatovas,Lina Macijauskienė,Toma Šimbelytė,Jelena Čelutkienė,Ieva Eglė Jamontaitė,Alma Cirtautas,Svetlana Lenickiene,Dalia Petrauskiene,Evelina Cikanaviciute,Edita Gaveliene,Gertruda Klimaviciute,Kornelija Rauduvyte,Rimantas Baušys,Kęstutis Strupas
摘要
Recent studies have demonstrated that prehabilitation improves patients' physical fitness but its impact on postoperative morbidity remains unclear. This study aimed to assess the effect of personalized, multimodal, semisupervised, home-based prehabilitation on postoperative complications after surgery for gastric cancer.This RCT was conducted at two centres in Lithuania. Patients (aged at least18 years) with gastric cancer scheduled to undergo elective primary surgery or surgery after neoadjuvant chemotherapy for gastric cancer were randomized (1 : 1) to prehabilitation or standard care. Prehabilitation included exercise interventions focused on endurance, respiratory muscle strength, stretching, and resistance training as well as nutritional and psychological support. The primary outcome was the proportion of patients with postoperative complications within 90 days after surgery. Secondary outcomes included 90-day mortality rate, physical condition, fitness level, nutritional status, quality of life, anxiety and depression level, and proportion of patients completing neoadjuvant chemotherapy.Between February 2020 and September 2022, 128 participants were randomized to prehabilitation (64) or standard care (64), and 122 (prehabilitation 61, control 61) were analysed. The prehabilitation group had increased physical capacity before the operation compared with baseline (mean 6-min walk test change +31 (95 per cent c.i. 14 to 48) m; P = 0.001). The prehabilitation group had a decreased rate of non-compliance with neoadjuvant treatment (risk ratio (RR) 0.20, 95 per cent c.i. 0.20 to 0.56), a 60 per cent reduction in the number of patients with postoperative complications at 90 days after surgery (RR 0.40, 0.24 to 0.66), and improved quality of life compared with the control group.Prehabilitation reduced morbidity in patients who underwent gastrectomy for gastric cancer.NCT04223401 (http://www.clinicaltrials.gov).
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