Prehabilitation for gastrointestinal cancer patients.
10.3760/cma.j.cn.441530-20200318-00152
- Author:
Yan Bing ZHOU
1
Author Information
1. Department of Gastrointestinal Surgery, the Affiliated Hospital of Qingdao University, Qingdao 266003, China.
- Publication Type:Journal Article
- Keywords:
Enhanced recovery after surgery;
Functional Status;
Gastrointestinal neoplasms;
Prehabilitation;
Surgery
- MeSH:
Chemoradiotherapy/adverse effects*;
Digestive System Surgical Procedures/psychology*;
Gastrointestinal Neoplasms/therapy*;
Humans;
Preoperative Care;
Preoperative Exercise;
Quality of Life;
Recovery of Function
- From:
Chinese Journal of Gastrointestinal Surgery
2021;24(2):122-127
- CountryChina
- Language:Chinese
-
Abstract:
Gastrointestinal cancer and related treatments (surgery and chemoradiotherapy) are associated with declined functional status (FS) that has impact on quality of life, clinical outcome and continuum of care. Psychological distress drives an impressive burden of physiological and psychiatric conditions in oncologic care. Cancer patients often experience anxiety, depression, low self-esteem and fears of recurrence and death. Cancer prehabilitation is a process from cancer diagnosis to the beginning of treatment, which includes psychological, physical and nutritional assessments for a baseline functional level, identification of comorbidity, and targeted interventions that improve patient's health and functional capacity to reduce the incidence and the severity of current and future impairments with cancer, chemoradiotherapy and surgery. Multimodal prehabilitation program encompasses a series of planned, structured, repeatable and purposive interventions including comprehensive physical exercise, nutritional therapy, and relieving anxiety and depression, which integrates into best perioperative management ERAS pathway and aims at using the preoperative period to prevent or attenuate the surgery-related functional decline, to cope with surgical stress and to improve the consequences. However, a number of questions remain in regards to prehabilitation in gastrointestinal cancer surgery, which consists of the optimal makeup of training programs, the timing and approach of the intervention, how to improve compliance, how to measure functional capacity, and how to make cost-effective analysis. Therefore, more high-level evidence-based studies are expected to evaluate the value of implementation of prehabilitation into standard practice.