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Effect of Pulmonary Rehabilitation on Perioperative Outcomes in Smoker Patients With Lung Cancer

Not Applicable
Conditions
Pulmonary Neoplasm
Interventions
Other: pulmonary rehabilitation
Registration Number
NCT03010033
Lead Sponsor
Ruijin Hospital
Brief Summary

It is reported that smoker patients (\>400 cigarette/year) will suffer more postoperative complications than non-smoker patients after lobectomy. Evidences has suggested pulmonary rehabilitation could reduce the pulmonary complications after thoracic surgery. However, the effect and long-term results of pulmonary rehabilitation on smoker patients have not been studied. The purpose of this study is to determine whether pulmonary rehabilitation is effective to smoker patients who underwent lobectomy.

Detailed Description

In China, the smoker population is about 300 hundred million. Tobacco has become one of the world's public health problem. 30 percent of global surgery patients have smoking history. It is reported that smoker patients (\>400 cigarette/year) will suffer more postoperative complications than non-smoker patients after lobectomy (38.2% vs 12.5%). Smoking is an independent risk factor of postoperative complications of cardiothoracic surgery. Evidences showed that smoking had a negative effect on airway management which plays an important role in postoperative recovery for thoracic surgery. Therefore, we hypothesise that intervention-related study to find a way to reduce postoperative complications for smoker patients is significantly meaningful in improving the overall outcome after pulmonary surgery as 80 percent of patients with lung cancer are smoker in China. Recently, a series of strategies on airway management have been proposed by clinical doctors. As one of the important parts of airway management, pulmonary rehabilitation has been demonstrated by evidence-base medicine to reduce the pulmonary complications after thoracic surgery and increase the breathing capacity. According to the reported literatures, the effect and long-term results of pulmonary rehabilitation on smoker patients have not been studied, so we designed this randomized controlled trial to determine whether pulmonary rehabilitation would be effective to smoker patients who underwent lobectomy which was associated with significant loss of lung function.

According to the reported papers in China, main observation index in experimental group was about 25.7, and in control group was about 10%. At the level of α=0.05 (Bilateral), power of test (1-β)=0.80, ratio=1:1. The estimated minimum required sample size of each group was 93 cases, the statistical loss rate was set as 10%. The overall sample size of this study was about 200 cases.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
UNKNOWN
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
200
Inclusion Criteria
  1. signed consent
  2. smoker, ≥400/cigarette year
  3. surgical approach: open or Video-assisted Thoracoscopic Surgery (VATS) lobectomy
Exclusion Criteria
  1. Serious physical diseases in patients during hospitalization, such as severe heart and lung diseases (CLASS III-IV) (FEV1/FVC <0.7and FEV1 <50% predicted value), kidney disease (ESRD change need to continue dialysis), or liver diseases (cirrhosis of the liver accompanied by ascites)
  2. unable to obey interventional instructions/treatments because of any reasons
  3. stage IV lung cancer
  4. emergency surgery
  5. lung cancer with preoperative chemotherapy, radiotherapy or chemoradiotherapy

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
pulmonary rehabilitationpulmonary rehabilitation\[Study group\] preoperative treatment: smoking cession, aerosol inhalation for expectorant and antiasthmatic, anti-infection therapy if necessary, regular rehabilitation-propaganda and interventional pulmonary rehabilitation (preoperative part); postoperative treatment: regular postoperative treatment (anti-infection, pain control, oxygen Inhalation aerosol inhalation for expectorant and antiasthmatic), patting back (3 times/day, 15min/time), early ambulation unless serious patients and interventional pulmonary rehabilitation (postoperative part).
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
postoperative pulmonary complicationspostoperative in-hospital stay up to 30 days
Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
therapeutic time of antibioticsPostoperative in-hospital stay up to 30 days
peak expiratory flowbefore treatment, 3 days after treatment, 1 day after surgery, 3 days after surgery
length of stay (LOS)postoperative in-hospital stay up to 90 days
vital signsbefore treatment, 3 days after treatment, 1 day after surgery, 3 days after surgery
lung function testbefore treatment, 3 days after surgery, 3 months after surgery, 6 months after surgery
total hospitalization expenditurespostoperative in-hospital stay up to 30 days
arterial blood gas analysisbefore treatment, 3 days after treatment, 1 day after surgery, 3 days after surgery
pain score of expectoration1 day and 3 days after surgery

Visual Analogue Scale (VAS) Pain Score

amount of expectoration drainagepostoperative in-hospital stay up to 30 days

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Ruijin Hospital, Shanghai JiaoTong University School of Medicine

🇨🇳

Shanghai, Shanghai, China

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