Multimodal Prehabilitation to Enhance Functional Capacity Following Radical Cystectomy: A Randomized Controlled Trial

2019 
Abstract Background In patients with bladder cancer, poor functional status has remarkable deleterious effects on postoperative outcome and prognosis. Conditioning intervention initiated before surgery has the potential to reduce functional decline attributable to surgery. Nonetheless, evidence is lacking in patients undergoing radical cystectomy. Objective To determine whether a preoperative multimodal intervention (prehabilitation) is feasible and effective in radical cystectomy. Design, setting, and participants This study, conducted at an academic tertiary health care institution, enrolled adult patients scheduled for radical cystectomy. From August 2013 to October 2017, 70 patients were randomized: 35 to multimodal prehabilitation (prehab group) and 35 to standard care (control group). Intervention Multimodal prehabilitation was a preoperative conditioning intervention including aerobic and resistance exercise, diet therapy, and relaxation techniques. Outcome measurements and statistical analysis Primary outcome was perioperative change in functional capacity, measured with the distance covered during a 6-min walk test (6MWD), assessed at baseline, before surgery, and at 4 and 8 wk after surgery. Data were compared using robust mixed linear models for repeated measures. Results and limitations Preoperative change in 6MWD compared with baseline was not significantly different between groups (prehab group 40.8 [114.0] m vs control group 9.7 (108.4) m, p  = 0.250). However, at 4 wk after surgery, a significant difference in functional capacity was detected (6MWD, prehab group –15.4 [142.5] m vs control group –97.9 [123.8] m, p  = 0.014). No intervention-related adverse effects were reported. Conclusions Data suggested that multimodal prehabilitation resulted in faster functional recovery after radical cystectomy. Patient summary After major cancer surgery, people usually feel week and tired, and have less energy to perform activities of daily living. In this study, we showed that using the time before surgery to promote exercise and good nutrition could fasten recovery after the surgical removal of the bladder.
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