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Clinical Practice Guidelines for Enhanced Recovery After Colon and Rectal Surgery From the American Society of Colon and Rectal Surgeons and Society of American Gastrointestinal and Endoscopic Surgeons
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2017
Year
This clinical practice guideline represents a collaborative effort between the American Society of Colon and Rectal Surgeons (ASCRS) and the Society of American Gastrointestinal and Endoscopic Surgeons (SAGES). The ASCRS Clinical Practice Guidelines Committee is composed of society members who are chosen because they have demonstrated expertise in the specialty of colon and rectal surgery. In a collaborative effort, the ASCRS Clinical Practice Guidelines Committee and members of the SAGES Surgical Multimodal Accelerated Recovery Trajectory Enhanced Recovery Task Force and Guidelines Committee have joined together to produce this guideline, written and approved by both societies. The combined ASCRS/SAGES panel worked together to develop the statements in this guideline and approved these final recommendations. Through this effort, the ASCRS and SAGES continue their dedication to ensuring high-quality perioperative patient care. Previous guidelines on perioperative care for colon1 and rectal2 surgery included studies identified up to January 2012 with significant literature published since then. The combined ASCRS/SAGES committee was created to define current best-quality care for enhanced recovery after colon and rectal surgery. This clinical practice guideline is based on the best available evidence. These guidelines are inclusive and not prescriptive. Their purpose is to provide information on which decisions can be made rather than to dictate a specific form of treatment. These guidelines are intended for the use of all practitioners, healthcare workers, and patients who desire information about the management of the conditions addressed by the topics covered in these guidelines. It should be recognized that these guidelines should not be deemed inclusive of all proper methods of care or exclusive of methods of care reasonably directed toward obtaining the same results. The ultimate judgment regarding the propriety of any specific procedure must be made by the physician in light of all of the circumstances presented by the individual patient. STATEMENT OF THE PROBLEM Contemporary colorectal surgery is often associated with long length of stay (8 days for open surgery and 5 days for laparoscopic surgery),3 high cost,3 and rates of surgical site infection approaching 20%.4 During the hospital stay for elective colorectal surgery, the incidence of perioperative nausea and vomiting (PONV) may be as high as 80% in patients with certain risk factors.5 After discharge from colorectal surgery, readmission rates have been noted as high as 35.4%.6 An enhanced recovery protocol (ERP) is a set of standardized perioperative procedures and practices that is applied to all patients undergoing a given elective surgery. In general, these protocols are not intended for emergent cases, but components of them certainly could apply to the emergent/urgent patient. Also known as fast-track protocols or enhanced recovery after surgery (ERAS)1 protocols, the content of these specific protocols may vary significantly, but all are designed as a means to improve patient outcomes. Outcomes of interest to patients and providers include freedom from nausea, freedom from pain at rest, early return of bowel function, improved wound healing, and early hospital discharge.7 Although numerous perioperative protocols currently exist, this clinical practice guideline will evaluate the strength of evidence in support of measures to improve patient recovery after elective colon and rectal resections. A 2011 Cochrane review found that ERPs were associated with a reduction in overall complications and length of stay when compared with conventional perioperative patient management.8 Subsequent studies have shown that ERPs are associated with reduced healthcare costs and improved patient satisfaction.4 ERPs are also associated with improved outcomes regardless of whether patients undergo laparoscopic or open surgery.9 Studies have also shown that ERPs cannot simply be implemented and forgotten but require a continued audit process in place to guide compliance and to continue to improve quality.10–13 There are many different preoperative, intraoperative, and postoperative components in a typical ERP, and it is difficult to identify which are the most beneficial components of the bundle of measures, because they are generally all implemented simultaneously. However, one retrospective review of 8 years of compliance with an ERP identified these items as the strongest predictors of shorter length of stay: no nasogastric tube, early mobilization, early oral nutrition (early discontinuance of intravenous fluids), early removal of epidural, early removal of urinary catheter, and This clinical practice guideline will evaluate the evidence ERPs for colorectal surgery. of the SAGES and ASCRS Practice Guidelines Committee worked in of these guidelines from to final were approved by committee and These guidelines were a standardized for the of all of clinical practice which for of a review of the and of the of the of and of the The of specific of studies and of evidence for are available in the but all of the an of and the Cochrane of a of on and were from to and were to of the from the were also in certain and were given in these guidelines. After all of the were a of been identified for and of were for review and evidence with of the evidence based on of the by The final of was the of and by the American of Previous guidelines on perioperative care for colon1 and rectal2 surgery included studies identified up to January with significant literature published since The of and A of and discharge should be with the patient surgery. of based on discharge for patients undergoing colorectal surgery have been in an which that patients are for discharge when is of oral recovery of function, pain with oral to to no evidence of complications or and patient to the Although are studies that at the of regarding and discharge these are a of and have the of an ERP that discharge on hospital length of compliance with an ERP that patient and discharge been shown in and to be associated with length of stay and The to the discharge to for been as a of However, are between the when patients are discharge and with a to days of length of stay high ERP and on should be included in the of based on The of an is an risk for a length of stay after colorectal The of patient to improve of and hospital length of and hospital costs been in and as as a in is beneficial but a demonstrated that patient was most in the and studies have shown that by an of the site and patient was associated with improved postoperative of reduced rates of postoperative and improved patient regardless of and studies have the of an on is an of been shown to be the most of readmission after from to of an in which patients were in management and an enhanced recovery reduced overall from to and for from to a perioperative care been included in a and review of process measures to postoperative and A may be continued of based on high-quality should be to the of because it been shown to be and to improve of clinical have the of elective surgery. 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of The in these are with the Surgical and the as as The evidence been in high-quality Cochrane and of laparoscopic in colon and in rectal These studies support the of of the early have that outcomes may be with the laparoscopic for rectal clinical to that was to open surgery in a of of these for in of and to the are available from these the outcomes are from have shown that outcomes are for laparoscopic of rectal and outcomes are to open In of colon and rectal with years of rates of and overall of have also about the for but and studies have often shown to be associated with or overall to reduced length of stay and reduced The is the of with an ERP, as demonstrated in the Multimodal The use of and nasogastric for colorectal surgery should be of based on should not be in colorectal surgery and should be for patients who develop postoperative to have demonstrated that patients who not nasogastric in the postoperative have no in nausea, to return of bowel function, or length of stay when compared with patients who nasogastric who not nasogastric also oral days than patients who nasogastric that nasogastric may nutrition in the postoperative the use of nasogastric was associated with a risk of associated are no to support the use of to identify and have been in all have demonstrated no significant in or a of postoperative complications in patients who of published studies no to in patients with or colorectal The of the in to the not to the use of patients with or colorectal who for the have rates of and complications when compared with patients in which a was not of the that may be beneficial for a clinical of patients with rectal After Rectal for Rectal that the use of after rectal not any to the use of also been associated with and as as and patient is associated with shorter length of of based on of include and and The associated with can be reduced with enhanced recovery for colorectal surgery, of early from any at all to 8 by postoperative in ERPs compared with 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A of patients who elective colon on an ERP urinary it was for management or to and it was at the of the In this was the most the of was and was in of the in of patients and in should be of rectal resections. of based on on the and of to the may the risk of postoperative urinary retrospective studies have identified a risk of urinary after early removal in rectal retrospective studies have urinary An urinary removal after rectal on and 5 found that the rates of urinary were and This was not to identify in with patients compared and 5 urinary removal after rectal and found that rates of urinary were after removal rates of were in the removal A the rectal demonstrated urinary rates of and for and 5 removal this not because of an However, the of urinary in the was to published urinary rates for early removal after In this rates of were with early removal These that patients who undergo rectal surgery may have urinary removal on the postoperative as patients who undergo a who undergo rectal are at an risk of with of urinary urinary removal should be for patients with and
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