Abstract

Enhanced recovery after surgery (ERAS®) pathways aim to improve patient outcomes by applying multimodal practices before, during, and after operative procedures. Compared with standard care before ERAS, we investigated whether compliance to ERAS guidelines for nutritional care, preoperative oral carbohydrate loading and postoperative oral nutrition, was associated with a decrease in hospital length of stay (LOS) after pancreaticoduodenectomy, distal pancreatectomy, hepatectomy, radical cystectomy, and head and neck tumor resection with reconstruction. Compliance to ERAS nutrition recommendations was evaluated. Post-ERAS cohort was retrospectively analyzed. Pre-ERAS cohort consisted of case matched patients one year before ERAS: age more than or less than 65 years, body mass index (BMI) more than greater than or less than 30kg/m2, diabetes mellitus, sex, and procedure. Each cohort consisted of 297 patients. Binary linear regressions evaluated the incremental effect of postoperative nutrition timing and preoperative carbohydrate loading on LOS. Multivariate regressions adjusted for postoperative complications. Compliance with preoperative carbohydrate loading for the post-ERAS cohort was 81.7%. Mean hospital LOS was significantly shorter for the post-ERAS cohort compared with pre-ERAS cohort (8.3 vs 10.0 days, p<0.001). By procedure, LOS was significantly shorter for patients undergoing pancreaticoduodenectomy (p=0.003), distal pancreatectomy (p=0.014), and head and neck procedures (p=0.024). Early postoperative oral nutrition was associated with a 3.75-day shorter LOS (p<0.001); no nutrition was associated with a 3.29-day longer LOS (p<0.001). Compliance with ERAS protocols for specific nutritional care practices was associated with a statistically significant decrease in LOS without subsequent increases in 30-day readmission rates and positive financial impact. These findings suggest that ERAS guidelines for perioperative nutrition are a strategic pathway to improved patient recovery and value-based care in surgery.

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