Journal of Cardiothoracic Surgery (Dec 2023)

Pre-treatment optimisation with pulmonary rehabilitation of elderly lung cancer patients with frailty for surgery

  • Ira Goldsmith,
  • Gemma Chesterfield-Thomas,
  • Hannah Toghill

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13019-023-02433-9
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 18, no. 1
pp. 1 – 9

Abstract

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Abstract Objective Frailty develops as a result of age-related decline in many physiological systems and is associated with increased vulnerability to adverse outcomes following thoracic surgery. We prospectively tested our hypothesis that pre-operative pulmonary rehabilitation (Prehab) improves frailty, as suggested by a frailty index > 3 (FI > 3) and fitness, and thereby reduces the risk of post-surgical complications and death in vulnerable elderly lung cancer patients. Methods 221 surgical patients, 80 with FI > 3 vs. 141 patients with FI 3 (≥ 70,FI > 3) were compared with younger patients 3 were significantly older, had lower 6MWT and higher thoracoscores hence, 82.5% of patients with FI > 3 vs. 33.3% (p = 0.02) with FI ≤ 3 were considered high risk for surgery and postoperative adverse events. With Prehab there was significant improvement in the FI, dyspnoea scores, PS, LOA and 6MWT. Following surgery, there were no differences in major complication rates (8.8% vs. 9.2% p = ns); LOHS median (IQR) [7 (6.8) vs. 8 (5.5) days]; mortality at 30-days (3.7% vs. 0.7%, p = ns); 90-days (6.3% vs. 2.8%, p = ns) and 1-year survival (81.1% vs. 83.7% p = ns). Survival at 1100 days was (63.2% vs. 71.1%, p = 0.19). Likewise, 87.7% elderly ≥ 70,FI > 3 patients were considered high-risk for surgery and postoperative adverse events vs. 35.1% younger patients 3 was 55.2% vs. 79.96% for < 70,FI ≤ 3; (p = 0,01). Conclusion Our study suggests that Prehab optimises vulnerable high-risk elderly lung cancer patients with frailty allowing them to undergo surgery with outcomes of post-surgical complications, LOHS and mortality at 365 days no different to patients with no frailty. However, mid-term survival was lower for elderly patients with frailty.

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