Scientific Reports (Jun 2025)

Effect of preoperative rapamycin supplementation on perioperative clinical frailty and cognitive performance in a murine model undergoing anesthesia and surgery

  • Ming Ann Sim,
  • Jorming Goh,
  • Jasinda Lee,
  • Jian Hua Tay,
  • Francis Chee Kuan Tan,
  • Chunmei Li,
  • Esther S. P. Wong,
  • Will N. H. Loh,
  • Sophia T. H. Chew,
  • Andrea B. Maier,
  • Brian K. Kennedy,
  • Lian Kah Ti

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-025-02707-3
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 1
pp. 1 – 9

Abstract

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Abstract The geroprotective effects of rapamycin in mitigating frailty and cognitive complications in the perioperative period remains unknown. Of 39 C57BL/6 mice tested, 19 were young (16 weeks), and 20 were old (80 weeks). The interventional group (10 old, 10 young) received daily oral rapamycin for 8 weeks pre-op compared to controls (10 old, 9 young). Sham laparotomy was performed at week 9. Perioperative frailty was assessed using a murine clinical frailty scale, preoperatively and at 1, 4 and 8 weeks postoperatively. Spatial memory was assessed using the Barnes maze preoperatively, and at weeks 1 and 4 post-op. Rapamycin treatment is associated with significantly less decline in postoperative clinical frailty(p < 0.05). Subgroup analysis revealed similar findings for old and young mice. The rapamycin group demonstrated improved cognitive performance at 1-week postoperatively (β 40.18, 95%C.I. 8.70–71.67, p = 0.012), but only in older mice (β 54.51, 95%C.I. 6.77–102.25, p = 0.025). In a pre-clinical animal model of anesthesia and surgery, rapamycin supplementation protected against surgery-induced frailty and short-term postoperative cognitive dysfunction.

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