Feasibility and Effectiveness of Prehabilitation in High-risk Surgical Patients
Overview
- Phase
- Not Applicable
- Intervention
- Not specified
- Conditions
- Surgical Patients
- Sponsor
- University of Toronto
- Enrollment
- 150
- Locations
- 1
- Primary Endpoint
- Safety and adverse events
- Status
- Active, not recruiting
- Last Updated
- last year
Overview
Brief Summary
Surgical prehabilitation is the process of enhancing one's physical function and mental capacity to enable him/or her to withstand the stressor of surgery. Prehabilitation can be achieved via optimizing physical fitness, nutrition, and psychological health. Studies have shown that prehabilitation may prevent complications during and after surgery, reduce hospital length of stay, and improve postoperative recovery. Despite the growing interest in the field of prehabilitation, little is understood about how to implement prehabilitation an integrated clinical service. This study will examine the effect of a prehabilitation program that includes exercise, psychological, and nutritional optimization that emulates clinical integration pathways. Participants of this study will have a choice of participating in facility-based prehabilitation (FBP) or home-based prehabilitation (HBP) depending on their needs/accessibility to the Toronto General Hospital. Participant outcomes will be measured using standardized fitness testing, self-report questionnaires, and medical record reviews at baseline, one week preoperatively, and at 30 and 90 days postoperatively. A comprehensive assessment of feasibility will also be conducted to better understand facilitators and barriers to clinical integration.
Detailed Description
There is growing interest in the role of prehabilitation to reduce surgical risk, attenuate surgery-related deconditioning, and facilitate postoperative recovery. Compared to the postoperative setting, initiating health interventions preoperatively is proposed as an important strategy to improve health outcomes because: i) it targets modifiable risk factors for surgical complications; ii) patients may be more physically and/or psychologically capable of affecting change in health status compared to the early postoperative period; iii) wait times prior to surgery may be several weeks thus representing an opportunity to proactively invest in their recovery; and iv) patients may be sensitized to the importance of adverse health behaviours that may have contributed to the need for surgery (i.e. a 'teachable moment'). The potential benefit of prehabilitation extends beyond potential gains in health from baseline to surgery, but also includes the prevention or attenuation of deconditioning that patients experience during the postoperative period. The findings of recent systematic reviews and meta-analyses assessing the benefits of prehabilitation interventions in surgical patients provide support for their efficacy in improving physical fitness, length of stay, surgical complication rates, and health-related quality of life (HRQOL). While previous interventional studies have demonstrated promising findings, little is known about how feasible it is to integrate prehabilitation into standard of care for people awaiting surgery. This study intends to employ intervention design features previously shown to be feasible and efficacious and employs a hybrid effectiveness-implementation trial design model to assess feasibility of clinical integration.
Investigators
Daniel Santa Mina, PhD
Assistant Professor
University of Toronto
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria
- •Planned for surgery at the University Health Network
- •Fluent in English
- •Referred by their surgeon with indication for prehabilitation as per the surgeon's clinical impression (i.e. higher-than-average risk candidate; marginal candidate for surgery due to limited physiologic reserve; frail; deconditioned; or other reason with explanation.
Exclusion Criteria
- Not provided
Outcomes
Primary Outcomes
Safety and adverse events
Time Frame: Baseline to surgery
Any safety or adverse events related to the prehabilitation intervention will be reported at each in-person session for FBP participants and during weekly telephone calls with HBP participants. Reporting and grading will follow the Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events version 5.0.
Referral and Enrollment Data
Time Frame: Baseline
* The number of eligible patients per month who consent for surgery will be ascertained via the preadmission clinic databases. * The total number of referrals received from surgeons. * The number of patients that agree to participate in the prehabilitation program. * Demographics, disease characteristics, and treatment type will be captured for prehabilitation participants * Referred patients who decline participation in the study will be compared to all consenting participants using information provided on the referral form * For those who fail screening or decline participation, we will log their demographic and reasons for non-participation.
Intervention adherence and fidelity
Time Frame: Baseline to surgery
* Adherence for FBP participants will be recorded via attendance to each in-person session. Fidelity and adherence will be further measured by detailed recording of performance on the aerobic and resistance training components of the exercise sessions. * HBP participants will be contacted weekly via telephone or email for adherence recording by the research coordinator. A logbook will be used to self-report HBP participants' home-based exercise that contains specific fields to capture all session details. * Adherence to stress management and utilization of smoking cessation tools (as required) will be recorded weekly using a logbook within the participant manuals. This includes the number of relaxation sessions per week; compliance with dietary recommendations for dietary behaviours, protein supplementation, and for smokers, the tools used, and the number of times accessed.
Study retention
Time Frame: Baseline, 1 week prior to surgery, 30- and 90-day postoperatively
- The frequency of drop-out during program participation will be documented including reasons for drop-out. Descriptive statistics for demographic data and reasons will be used to describe program completers and drop-outs.
Window of opportunity
Time Frame: Baseline to surgery
The 'prehabilitation window' will be recorded and is operationally defined as the time from program referral to the date of surgery. We will also describe the total preoperative period (time between consent for surgery and date of surgery) and prehabilitation program duration (time from program initiation to surgery). Each of these periods will be recorded in days.
Barriers and facilitators
Time Frame: 30-day postoperatively
Qualitative content analysis on barriers and facilitators for prehabilitation participation and engagement will be conducted using semi-structured interviews. Both participants of prehabilitation and usual care will be asked to participate in interviews via telephone or in-person. To reach saturation for identifying meta-themes within a heterogenous population, sample of has been suggested 15 for the collection of prevalent and more salient ideas.
Economic feasibility (hospital perspective)
Time Frame: Baseline, 1 week prior to surgery, 30- and 90-day postoperatively
A cost impact on the perspective of the hospital will be conducted based on primary hospital length of stay, readmission, and readmission length of stay. This will be used to determine cost differences between those that participate in prehabilitation (FBP and HBP) compared to usual care.
Economic feasibility (patient perspective)
Time Frame: Baseline, 1 week prior to surgery, 30- and 90-day postoperatively
Patient-perspective costing will be measured by a patient-reported cost-diary. This includes: direct healthcare cost (i.e. visits to the general practice, specialists care, unities applied to prescribed medication); direct non-health care costs (i.e. cost of over-the-counter medication, cost of health activities, hours of paid and unpaid household help, transportation, and value of other out-of-pocket expenses, with specifics on exercise-related expenses)l and indirect costs (i.e. number of days absent from work, days lost from housekeeping, and other daily activities).
Secondary Outcomes
- Hospital length of stay(Up to 90-days postoperatively)
- Changes in aerobic functional capacity(Baseline, 1 week prior to surgery, 30- and 90-day postoperatively)
- Postoperative complications and mortality(Up to 90-days postoperatively)
- Changes in HRQOL(Baseline, 1 week prior to surgery, 30- and 90-day postoperatively)
- Changes in diet(Baseline and 1 week prior to surgery)
- Changes in musculoskeletal functional capacity(Baseline, 1 week prior to surgery, 30- and 90-day postoperatively)
- Changes in depression(Baseline, 1 week prior to surgery, 30- and 90-day postoperatively)
- Changes in body composition(Baseline, 1 week prior to surgery, 30- and 90-day postoperatively)