Wang G, Jiang ZW, Xu J, Gong JF, Bao Y, Xie LF, Li JS. Fast-track rehabilitation program vs conventional care after colorectal resection: A randomized clinical trial. World J Gastroenterol 2011; 17(5): 671-676 [PMID: 21350719 DOI: 10.3748/wjg.v17.i5.671]
Corresponding Author of This Article
Zhi-Wei Jiang, MD, Research Institute of General Surgery, Jinling Hospital, School of Medicine, Nanjing University, 305 Zhongshan East Road, Nanjing 210002, Jiangsu Province, China. surgery34@163.com
Article-Type of This Article
Brief Article
Open-Access Policy of This Article
This article is an open-access article which was selected by an in-house editor and fully peer-reviewed by external reviewers. It is distributed in accordance with the Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial (CC BY-NC 4.0) license, which permits others to distribute, remix, adapt, build upon this work non-commercially, and license their derivative works on different terms, provided the original work is properly cited and the use is non-commercial. See: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/
World J Gastroenterol. Feb 7, 2011; 17(5): 671-676 Published online Feb 7, 2011. doi: 10.3748/wjg.v17.i5.671
Table 1 Principles of fast track rehabilitation program and conventional care
Fast track rehabilitation program
Conventional care
Preoperative
Patients and their relatives
Patient were educated in the standard manner
were informed about the surgical procedure and postoperative course
Day before surgery
Bowel preparation
No bowel preparation was performed
Two oral sachets of fleet® bowel preparation
Carbohydrate load
4 units (preOp®)
No
Diet
Last meal 6 h before operation
Last meal at midnight
Day of surgery
Pre-operative fasting
No, 2 units (preOp®) 2 h before surgery
Yes
Nasogastric tubes
No unless nausea and vomit
Routine placement
Pre-anesthetic medication
No
Oral diazepam 10 mg
Anesthesia
General anesthesia
General anesthesia
Remifentanil 1 μg/kg per minute
Remifentanil 1 μg/kg per minute
Propofol 2-4 mg/kg per hour
Propofol 2-4 mg/kg per hour
Cisatracium 0.15 mg/kg
Cisatracium 0.15 mg/kg
Ondansetron 4 mg
Ondansetron 4 mg
Bupivacaine 0.25% 20 mL (incision)
Epidural catheter
T10-T12
Test: 3 mL 2% lidocaine with epinephrine
Bupivacaine 0.5% (6 + 6) mL
Surgical management
Minimal invasive incision
Median laparotomy approach
Infiltration of surgical wounds with Bupivacaine
No infiltration of surgical wounds with local anesthetic drugs
Surgical drains
No, unless required in circumstances and discarded in early time (usually on postoperative day 1)
Routine placement usually discarded the day before discharge
Early post-operative care
Use of epidural catheter (0.125% Bupivacaine with 2.5 μg/mL Fentanyl)
Analgesia by bolus administration of diclofenac or morphine
First oral drink 2 h after surgery
No oral application scheme
IV infusion of Ringers lactate 1.5 L/d
IV infusion of Ringers lactate 2.5 L/d
Mobilization in the evening (> 2 h out of bed)
No mobilization scheme
Postoperative care
Day 1 after surgery
Oral intake > 2 L (including 4 units CHL liquids)
Diet increased on daily basis
Semi-solid food intake
IV fluid administration (2.5 L/d) till adequate oral fluid intake
Stop IV fluid administration
Mobilization according to attending surgeon
Remove urine catheter
Expand mobilization (> 6 h out of bed)
Day 2 after surgery
Remove epidural add Diclofenac 3 × 50 mg/d
Continue as on day 1 till discharge criteria fulfilled
Normal diet
Expand mobilization (> 8 h)
Plan discharge
Day 3 after surgery
Continue as on day 2 till discharge criteria fulfilled
Continue as on day 2 till discharge criteria fulfilled
Table 2 Characteristics of patients and their diagnosis
Fast track rehabilitation group (n = 106)
Conventional care group (n = 104)
P value
Median age (range, yr)
57 (38-69)
55 (40-67)
0.462
Male/female
65/41
60/44
0.393
Colon/rectum
73/33
63/41
0.110
ASA score
0.384
I
27
32
-
II
60
56
-
III
19
16
-
Operation
0.721
Right hemicolectomy
30
24
Left hemicolectomy
18
26
Sigmoid colectomy
28
32
Anterior resection
30
22
TNM stage
0.741
I
19
17
II
56
61
III
31
26
Table 3 Postoperative rehabilitation and hospital stay time of two groups n (%)
Fast track rehabilitation group (n = 106)
Conventional care group (n = 104)
P value
Walk on surgery day
11 (35)
0 (0)
0.001
Walk on D 1
56 (53)
24 (23)
0.000
Walk on D 2
90 (85)
61 (59)
0.001
Days until flatus
0.001
mean ± SD
2.1 ± 2.0
3.2 ± 2.5
-
Median (range)
2 (1-6)
3 (1-8)
-
Hospital stay time (d)
0.001
mean ± SD
5.1 ± 3.1
7.6 ± 4.8
-
Median (range)
5 (2-41)
7 (3-55)
-
Table 4 General and surgical complications of two groups
Fast track rehabilitation group (n = 106)
Conventional care group (n = 104)
P value
Overall complications
20
39
0.015
Patients with complications
14
28
0.016
General complications
10
23
0.042
Patients with general complications
7
16
0.048
Cardiac
2
5
-
Pulmonary
3
8
-
Thromboembolic
1
3
-
Urinary tract
2
5
-
Other
2
2
-
Overall surgical complications
10
16
0.221
Patients with surgical complications
7
12
0.230
Wound infection
4
7
-
Anastomotic leakage
4
2
-
Bowel obstruction
2
5
-
Death
2
1
0.572
Citation: Wang G, Jiang ZW, Xu J, Gong JF, Bao Y, Xie LF, Li JS. Fast-track rehabilitation program vs conventional care after colorectal resection: A randomized clinical trial. World J Gastroenterol 2011; 17(5): 671-676