Editorial
Copyright ©The Author(s) 2024.
World J Clin Cases. Mar 26, 2024; 12(9): 1549-1554
Published online Mar 26, 2024. doi: 10.12998/wjcc.v12.i9.1549
Table 1 GRADE system for rating strength of recommendations and rating quality of evidence (Guyatt et al[15], 2008)
Recommendation strength
Definition
Strong Desirable effects of intervention clearly outweigh the undesirable effects, or clearly do not
Weak When trade-offs are less certain—either because of low-quality evidence or because evidence suggests desirable and undesirable effects are closely balanced
Evidence level Definition
High quality Further research unlikely to change confidence in estimate of effect
Moderate qualityFurther research likely to have important impact on confidence in estimate of effect and may change the estimate
Low qualityFurther research very likely to have important impact on confidence in estimate of effect and likely to change the estimate
Very low quality Any estimate of effect is very uncertain
Table 2 Summary of recommended interventions for the perioperative care of knee replacement


Recommendation
Recommendation grade
Level of evidence
Preoperative Preoperative information, education and counsellingPreoperative patient education recommendedStrong Low
Preadmission patient optimizationSmoking Smoking cessation for 4 wk or more recommended before surgeryStrongHigh
AlcoholAlcohol cessation recommended before surgeryStrong Low
AnemiaAnemia should
be identified, investigated, and corrected prior to surgery
StrongHigh
Preoperative physiotherapyNot recommended as an essential interventionStrong Moderate (for not recommending)
PerioperativePreoperative fastingIntake of clear fluids until 2 h before the induction of anesthesia, and a 6-h fast for solid food is recommendedStrong Moderate
Preoperative carbohydrate treatmentNot currently recommended as an essential routine
Intervention
Strong Moderate (for not recommending)
Pre-anesthetic medicationroutine administration of sedatives to reduce anxiety preoperatively is not recommendedStrongLow
Standardized anesthetic protocolGeneral versus central neuraxial anesthesiaBoth may be used as part of multimodal anesthetic regimesStrong Moderate (for both)
Spinal (intrathecal) opioidsNot recommended
for routine use
StrongModerate
EpiduralsNot recommended for routine useStrong High (analgesic efficacy), moderate (negative safety and side-effect profile)
Use of local anesthetics for nerve blocks and infiltration
analgesia
LIA recommended
for knee replacement
Nerve blocks are therefore not recommended as an
essential ERAS component
StrongHigh (LIA in knee replacement)
Postoperative Nausea and vomitingscreening for and multimodal PONV prophylaxis and
treatment
StrongModerate
Prevention of perioperative blood loss-tranexamic acidRecommended to reduce perioperative blood lossStrongHigh
Multimodal analgesiaParacetamolRecommended for routine useStrongModerate
Non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs)Routine use of NSAIDS recommended for patients without contraindicationsStrongHigh
GabapentinoidsNot recommended currently Strong Moderate (for not recommending)
Supplemental opioid analgesiaERAS programs seek to minimize the use of opioids. However, opioids such as oxycodone may be used when required as part of a multimodal
approach
StrongHigh
Perioperative factorsMaintaining normothermiaNormal body temperature should be maintained peri- and postoperatively through pre-warming and the active warming of patients intraoperativelyStrongHigh
Antimicrobial prophylaxisSystemic antimicrobial prophylaxis recommended in accordance with local policy and availabilityStrongModerate
Antithrombotic prophylaxis treatmentPatients should be mobilized as soon as possible post-surgery and receive antithrombotic prophylaxis treatment in accordance with local policyStrongModerate
Perioperative surgical factorsSurgical techniqueNo recommendation on surgical techniqueStrong High
Use of tourniquetRoutine use not recommendedStrongModerate
Surgical DrainRoutine use not recommendedStrongModerate
Fluid managementIntravenous fluids – judicious use StrongModerate
Postoperative intravenous fluids – discouraged in favor of early oral intake
Urinary catheterRoutine use – not recommendedStrongModerate
When used – should be removed as soon as the patient is able to void, ideally within 24 h of surgery
Recommended catheterization threshold – 800 mL
Nutritional careEarly return to normal
diet recommended
StrongLow
Early mobilizationPatients should be mobilized as early as they are able to in order in order to facilitate early achievement of discharge criteriaStrongStrong
Criteria-based dischargeObjective discharge criteria should be used to facilitate patient discharge directly to their homeStrongLow
Continuous improvement and auditRoutine internal and/or external audit of process measures, clinical outcomes, cost effectiveness, patient satisfaction/experience, and changes to the pathway is recommendedStrongLow