Introduction
In recent years enhanced recovery after surgery (ERAS) pathways have been implemented in the perioperative care after pancreaticoduodenectomy (PD) [1]. These pathways apply evidence-based principles of care for optimisation of postoperative analgesia, drain management, early feeding and mobilisation with the aim of reducing the postoperative stress response and thus enhancing recovery and outcome [2–4]. Pancreaticoduodenectomy performed in high volume centres resulted in low mortality of 3–5.3% [5–7] but was still associated with significant morbidity.
However, recent data showed that a large proportion of pancreatic resections including PD were still performed in low and intermediate volume centres in Europe and elsewhere [8, 9]. Although centralisation of pancreatic surgery will continue, it appears unlikely that all pancreatic resections will be performed in high volume centres in the near future [10]. On the other hand, it remains questionable whether the advances in perioperative care after PD, reported by teams of high volume centres, would be possible to achieve in a low volume centre for pancreatic surgery.
Therefore, the aim of the present study was to report the short-term outcome after implementation of a clinical pathway including some ERAS recommendations for PD in a low volume centre for pancreatic surgery. The hypothesis was that pathway implementation would be safe in this setting.
Material and methods
According to French legislation for the regulation of clinical research, requirements for the provision of informed consent concerning the study were waived because of the retrospective monocentric study design and local data analysis without data transmission [11]. However, patients gave informed written consent for surgery and data collection.
The authors’ centre is a tertiary hospital with 2 surgeons performing PD. Individual surgeon experience was over 60 PDs at the beginning of the study period. Sixty-two pancreaticoduodenectomies were performed during 6 years between 1 October 2013 and 30 September 2019 in the authors’ institution, classifying the centre as low volume (annual PD volume < 16) [7, 10].
Standard preoperative workup included blood analysis, computed tomography scanning and/or magnetic resonance imaging in all patients. Contraindications for PD were: liver cirrhosis, distant metastases and arterial invasion.
A clinical pathway was considered for patients undergoing elective PD with or without portal/superior mesenteric vein resection, but without simultaneous associated procedures. Accordingly, exclusion criteria for the pathway were emergency PD (n = 2), PD with simultaneous associated procedures: hepatectomy (n = 2), colectomy (n = 4) and total PD (n = 1).
A further 8 patients had standard perioperative care at the discretion of the responsible surgeon. Therefore, 45 patients were included in the clinical pathway. The data were retrieved from a prospective database and retrospectively analysed. Patients were followed up for at least 3 months. No patient was lost during follow-up.
Clinical pathway
The items of the ERAS recommendations [12] used and not used in the current study are shown in Table 1. Biliary stenting was performed endoscopically if the total bilirubin level was > 250 µmol/l or if this level would be achieved within a few days without drainage [13]. Preoperative immunonutrition (Oral-Impact) was given for 7 days according to French guidelines [14]. Patient controlled epidural analgesia was routinely used [12]. Alternatively in selected cases (technical reason or not accepted by patients) intravenous (morphine) patient controlled analgesia was used. Allogeneic blood transfusion was given when the haemoglobin level dropped below 8 g/dl and according to haemodynamic tolerance. Intraoperative warming and avoidance of fluid overload were used routinely. Antibiotics were given perioperatively according to French guidelines [15] and in patients with a biliary prothesis five days of postoperative antimicrobial therapy was given [16]. Bile culture was performed routinely. Patients were monitored in an intermediate care unit for at least 3 days postoperatively and glucose level monitoring and treatment of hyperglycaemia with insulin was used routinely. All patients had thromboprophylaxis with low molecular weight heparin [12]. A somatostatin analogue was not given routinely [12]. A proton-pump inhibitor was given routinely.
Key targets for the postoperative course were derived from the protocol of Robertson et al. in 2012 [17] with some modifications: target for nasogastric tube (NGT) removal postoperative day (PoD) 2, target for solid food PoD 5 because of the pancreatogastric anastomosis and target for discharge PoD 8 and are shown in Table 1. Oral nutrition was started at PoD 3 with clear liquids, followed by liquid food at PoD 4 and solid food at PoD 5. Early postoperative enteral nutrition via a percutaneous jejunostomy was included in the pathway following the guidelines of the European Society for Parenteral and Enteral Nutrition (ESPEN) [18].
Table 1
ERAS items [12] | Current study |
---|---|
Preoperative counselling | Applied routinely |
Perioperative biliary drainage | Drainage if bilirubin > 250 µmol/l [13] |
Preoperative smoking and alcohol consumption | Was attempted |
Preoperative nutrition | In malnourished patients: oral supplements |
Perioperative oral immunonutrition | Routinely used for 7 day preoperatively |
Oral bowel preparation | Bowel preparation not used |
Preoperative fasting and | Solid food until 12 p.m. the day before the operation, clear fluid up to 2 h before operation |
Preoperative treatment with carbohydrates | Oral carbohydrate loading not used |
Pre-anaesthetic medication | No long acting premedication used |
Anti-thrombotic prophylaxis | Low molecular weight heparin and compression routinely used for 4 weeks |
Antimicrobial prophylaxis | Routinely used [15], in patients with biliary drainage 5 days treatment [16] |
Skin preparation | Routinely used |
Epidural analgesia | Peridural anaesthesia routinely used, removed PoD 3 |
Intravenous analgesia | PCA used alternatively, removed PoD 3 |
Wound catheters and TAP block | Not used |
Postoperative nausea and vomiting | Pharmacological intervention routinely used |
Incision | Subcostal incision with upper midline extension |
Avoiding hypothermia | Intraoperative cutaneous warming routinely used |
Postoperative glycaemic control | Monitoring of glucose levels and insulin treatment used routinely |
Nasogastric intubation | Nasogastric tubes routinely used for 24–48 h |
Fluid balance | Fluid and salt overload was avoided, transoesophageal Doppler not used |
Perianastomotic drain | Drain removal at PoD 5 according to drain amylase level |
Somatostatin analogues | Not used routinely |
Urinary drainage | Transurethral catheterisation removed PoD 3 |
Delayed gastric emptying | No prevention strategy |
Stimulation of bowel movement | Oral laxatives and chewing gum not used routinely |
Postoperative artificial nutrition | Routine enteral nutrition starting PoD1, oral nutrition: PoD 3 liquids, PoD 5 solid food |
Early and scheduled mobilization | Active mobilization starting PoD 1 |
Audit | Current study |
Deviations from ERAS recommendation are in bold | |
PoD | Postoperative key targets (underlined) for the clinical pathway |
1 | NGT removed if volume < 500 ml/24 h, start enteral nutrition: 10 ml/h, sit for 2 × 30 min |
2 | NGT removed, enteral nutrition 20 ml/h, sit for 2 × 1 h |
3 | Epidurals and urinary catheter removed, oral liquids, enteral nutrition 30 ml/h, sit for 2 × 1 h, short walk, discharge of intermediate care unit |
4 | Tolerating liquid oral diet, enteral nutrition 40 ml/h |
5 | Drainage removed if amylase < 150 U/l, tolerating solid oral diet, walking in ward |
6 | STOP l.v. fluids |
7 | STOP enteral nutrition, normal diet |
8 | Discharge home or to rehabilitation facility |
With oral proton-pump inhibitor, oral nutritional complements if indicated (undernutrition), 3 weeks of thromboprophylaxis with low-molecular-weight heparin |
Deviations from ERAS recommendations were: no oral carbohydrate preload, transoesophageal Doppler not used, routine laxatives and chewing gum not used, routine use of NGT and enteral nutrition.
Surgical technique
After a bilateral subcostal incision with upper midline extension, inter-aorto-caval lymph node sampling with frozen section was performed routinely [19] and in case of no metastatic lymph node a PD without pyloric conservation was performed in all patients. Reconstruction was performed with pancreatogastric anastomosis to the posterior gastric wall [20], end-to-side hepaticojejunal anastomosis and end-to-side retrocolic gastrojejunal anastomosis. Portal or superior mesenteric vein resection, if indicated, was performed en bloc and a veno-venous anastomosis was performed [21]. No grafts were used. A percutaneous jejuno-stomy for postoperative enteral nutrition was placed 30 cm downwards from the gastrojejunal anastomosis. Drainage of the hepaticojejunal and pancreatogastric anastomosis was performed with a multitubular silicon drain (Coloplast) [22, 23].
Definitions
Overall complications were defined as any deviation from an uneventful postoperative course within 90 days after surgery. Severity of complications was defined according to the Clavien-Dindo classification [24]. Postope-rative pancreatic fistula (POPF) [25], delayed gastric empty-ing (DGE) [26] and post-pancreatectomy haemorrhage [27] were defined according to the International Study Group of Pancreatic Surgery. Hospital stay was defined as postoperative hospital stay. Undernutrition was defined with the Nutritional Risk Index (NRI) [28]. Comorbidity was defined according to the Charlson Comorbidity index [29].
Endpoints
The primary endpoint was the achievement of postope-rative key targets of the pathway. Secondary endpoints were complications and mortality within 90 days postope-ratively, readmissions and postoperative hospital stay. The dataset was split in two to compare the outcome between the first 22 patients and the next 23 patients included in the study, in order to analyse changes in protocol compliance and outcome.
Statistical analysis
Continuous variables were reported as median with interquartile range (IQR) and compared with the non-parametric Mann-Whitney U test. Dichotomous variables were reported as n (%) and compared with the Pearson χ2 or Fisher’s exact test, as appropriate. All statistical tests were two-sided, and p < 0.050 was considered significant.
Results
The first 22 patients were operated on between 1 October 2013 and January 2017, the next 23 patients between January 2017 and 30 September 2019.
Baseline characteristics of all 45 patients are shown in Table 2. Undernutrition defined by an NRI < 97.5 was registered in 26 patients (57.7%) and preoperative anaemia (haemoglobin level < 12.5 g/dl) in 25 patients (55.5%). Preoperative biliary drainage was required in 23 patients (51.1%) with a preoperative bilirubin level over or near 250 µmol/l. The median total bilirubin level before stenting is given in Table 2. The intraoperative variables were not different between the two groups and are shown in Table 3. Forty patients (88.9%) were operated on for malignancy. Nine patients (20%) had portal or superior mesenteric vein resection. Two patients had a pancreatico-jejunal anastomosis, one because of a previous gastrectomy and the other because of a difficult mobilisation of the pancreatic tail. The variables impacting POPF, as determined by the “fistula risk score” [30], were not different between the two groups.
Table 2
Table 3
[ii] Continuous variables are reported as median and interquartile range. Dichotomous variables are reported as N.
[iii] Continuous variables were compared using the Mann-Whitney U test. Dichotomous variables were compared using Fisher’s exact test. Fistula risk score [30]: 0–2: no/low risk, ≥ 3 moderate/high risk.
The main results of the histological analysis of the PD specimen are shown in Table 4. The number of resected and analysed lymph nodes, intraoperative blood loss, perioperative transfusion rate and duration of surgery showed accordance with recommendations for quality control in pancreatic surgery [31, 32]. In 13 patients an R1 resection was registered because of an involved arterial margin; of those patients 12 had pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma.
Table 4
Complications were registered in 29 patients (64.4%). Post-pancreatectomy haemorrhage was registered in 6 patients (13.3%) and 5 patients (11.1%) needed reoperations: 3 for early haemorrhage (within 24 h) and 2 for late haemorrhage. Three reoperated patients needed further procedures: 2 patients an arterial embolisation and one patient a second re-operation.
Pancreatic fistula was registered in 10 patients (22.2%) and clinically relevant grade B/C fistula in 9 patients (20%). The fistula risk score [30] was predictive for pancreatic fistula: no and low risk group (score 0–2): 4.3% fistula (1 out of 23), moderate and high risk group (score ≥ 3): 40.9% fistula (9 out of 22) (p = 0.004).
Post-pancreatectomy haemorrhage was reported in 4 out of 10 patients (40%) with POPF versus 2 out of 35 patients (5.7%) without a pancreatic fistula (p = 0.016).
Delayed gastric emptying was registered in 13 patients (28.8%) and grade B/C in 4 patients (8.9%). Major complications (Clavien-Dindo ≥ 3) were registered in 7 patients (15.5%).
Two patients (4.4%) died within 90 days. In both patients post-pancreatectomy haemorrhage caused by POPF was the cause. In the remaining 43 patients median follow-up was 23 months (range 4–62).
After hospital discharge 37 patients (82.2%) went home and 8 (17.7%) were transferred to a rehabilitation facility. Median length of stay was 11 days (IQR: 8–14) and mean length of stay was 12.5 days for all 45 patients. Median length of stay was 9 days in 35 patients without POPF versus 16.5 days in 10 patients with a pancreatic fistula (p = 0.019).
Seven patients (15.5%) were readmitted within 31 days to the hospital for a median of 9 days (IQR: 3.5–18 days). No further readmission was registered after 31 days. Causes of readmissions were: bleeding complications in 3 patients requiring reoperation (2 patients) and arterial embolisation of aneurysm (1 patient), anaemia requiring transfusion (1 patient), undernutrition requiring treatment (1 patient) and non-specific abdominal pain (2 patients). No significant differences for complications, mortality and readmissions were observed between the first and the second period of the study (Table 5).
Table 5
Postoperative key targets
The nasogastric tube was removed by PoD 2 in 28 patients (Table 6), and by PoD 6 in 41 patients. Clear liquids were given at PoD 3 in 38 patients and solid food at PoD 5 in 18. Oral nutrition was impacted by DGE, which manifested with nausea and vomiting at median PoD 4 (range 3–6 days). A total of 13 patients (29%) developed DGE: in 9 patients (20%) an NGT was re-inserted for a median time of 6 days (range 2–16 days) and in 4 patients the NGT placed during the operation was taken out after PoD 9. All patients, except 4 with DGE grade B/C, were able to eat solid food by PoD 14.
Table 6
Drain amylase level was measured at PoD 1, 2 and 3 and drains were removed by PoD 5 in 28 patients (Table 6). Ten patients had a pancreatic fistula and in those patients the drainage was removed at median PoD 14.
In the second period of the study more patients achieved key targets: NGT removal PoD 2, oral fluids PoD 3 and drainage removed at PoD 5. The medium number of key targets achieved (out of 7) was 3 for the first 22 patients versus 5 for the next 23 patients, reflecting better compliance with the protocol. The median postoperative hospital stay was reduced in the second period and more patients were discharged at PoD 9.
Discussion
The aim of the present study was to report the short-term outcome after implementation of a clinical pathway for PD including some ERAS items in a low volume centre for pancreatic surgery. The hypothesis was that pathway implementation would be safe in this setting.
Outcome data of the present study showed accordance with data reported for PD in French academic centres: complications 64.4% versus 54.4% [33], mortality: 4.4% versus 3.8% [33], reoperation 11.1% versus 11.7% [33], respectively. Ninety day mortality of 4.4% in the present study was similar to data reported by high volume centres in the Netherlands: 4.3% [6] and England: 5.3% [7].
Over 80% of patients in the present study were discharged home. The readmission rate was 15.5% and similar to 15.6% [34] reported by Boteon et al. for the Birmingham group.
The number of resected lymph nodes, intraoperative blood loss, perioperative transfusion rate and duration of surgery were in accordance with recommendations for quality control in pancreatic surgery [31, 32]. The rather high rate of arterial margin involvement (46%, 12 out of 26) in ductal adenocarcinoma in the current study was not significantly different (p = 0.116) to the rate of 30% reported by Delpero et al. in a French multicentre study [35].
Adherence to the clinical pathway was higher in the second study period (since January 2017), probably reflecting a learning curve, and resulting in a reduced median hospital stay, but without affecting the complication and readmission rates.
The main limitation of the present study was the absence of a control group. In the authors’ opinion, the number of patients (n = 8) undergoing elective “standard” PD outside the clinical pathway was too small to serve as a control group. These 8 patients were managed outside the pathway because one surgeon started the clinical pathway in September 2013 and the other surgeon followed several months later. A comparison with a “historic” control group (before October 2013) was not done as this long time interval would have included further signifi-cant bias.
The small number of patients included per year and the resulting long study period are explained by the setting of a low volume centre. However, no significant changes in the perioperative management were observed during the study period for the included patients. Seventeen patients (27%, 17 out of 62) were managed outside the pathway either because of an emergency, associated procedures, total PD or surgeon preferences. Similar findings were reported by Tremblay St-Germain et al., who reported that 39 out of 122 patients (32%) were managed outside the pathway during the implementation period for the reason of compliance issues and additional procedures [3]. However, in the current study a majority (75%) of elective patients with PD (45 out of 60) were managed within the clinical pathway.
The protocol used in the present study should be criticised as not all items of the ERAS recommendation [12] were strictly applied in our institution.
Two aspects of the protocol that may require revision were the routine use of NGT and enteral nutrition via a percutaneous jejunostomy. We used a pancreatogastric anastomosis and an NGT was routinely inserted for 24–48 hours. However, evidence suggests that routine use of an NGT following PD is not necessary [36].
In the authors’ institution enteral nutrition after PD has been preferred over total parenteral nutrition since 2011 based on the ESPEN recommendations [18] and the report of reduced DGE after enteral nutrition [37]. Because undernutrition was frequently registered in our patients, enteral nutrition starting at PoD1 was included in the pathway, although this was not recommended in the ERAS guidelines [12].
In 2016 a randomised study reported a mortality rate of 12.7% after PD with enteral nutrition via a naso-jejunal feeding tube [38]. Although in our experience a similar mortality rate was not observed, the benefit of routine enteral nutrition should be questioned. There is evidence that early oral feeding with “on demand” enteral nutrition is better than routine enteral nutrition [39].
Another challenge was the avoidance of routine drainage and early drain removal as suggested in the ERAS recommendations [12]. Because level I evidence showed increased mortality if drainage was not used after PD [23] we used routine drainage and early drain removal if amylase levels were below a predefined value. In our institution drain amylase levels were recorded at PoD 1, 2 and 3 and further on if increased values (> 3x upper normal serum value at PoD 3) were registered. The fistula risk score [30] was predictive for POPF in the current study and may be useful for selective drain management in the future.
The major reason for a longer hospital stay in the present study was a pancreatic fistula. The median length of stay (a surrogate marker for a successful ERAS pathway) was 9 days in 35 patients without POPF versus 16.5 days in 10 patients with POPF (p = 0.019). In two patients a pancreatic fistula was diagnosed during the re-admission at PoD 11 and 16, after an initial uneventful hospital stay of 8 and 12 days respectively, with normal drain amylase levels at PoD 3 and a fistula risk score of 3 (moderate risk). This raises the question whether a target of discharge at PoD 8 was safe in these patients, as both patients had to be re-operated on for bleeding complications. However, we presume that it is rather unlikely that a longer initial hospital stay would have led to different management of complications. With these experiences in mind, particular care should be taken in identifying pancreatic fistula during the initial hospital stay, as it was the main risk factor for mortality, bleeding complications and a longer hospital stay.