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Brief Title: Fast Tracking in VATS Lobectomy: A Prospective, Historically Controlled, Propensity-Matched Clinical Trial
Official Title: Fast Tracking in VATS Lobectomy: A Prospective, Historically Controlled, Propensity-Matched Clinical Trial
Study ID: NCT02584322
Brief Summary: Currently, at the CHUM - Notre-Dame Hospital, there is no standardized patient care pathway for patients undergoing Video Assisted Thoracic Surgery (VATS) lobectomy. The investigators goal is to implement an Enhanced Recovery Program (ERP) for patient undergoing VATS lobectomy. The care given to patient prior to the implementation of this protocol was different amongst patients and depended on the surgeon's preferences. The implementation of this ERP will permit a reproducible and routine management for patients following their surgery.
Detailed Description: Lung cancer is the most common cause of cancer related death in men and women worldwide annually. In North America in 2009, an estimated 246,000 people were diagnosed with lung cancer, and 178,000 died as a result. Lobectomy consists of the surgical removal of an anatomic lobe of the lung. It represents the standard of care in the treatment of malignant lesions involving one lobe of the lung. This operation can be performed either with a chest incision with rib spreading (thoracotomy) or with a minimally invasive approach which does not include rib spreading (thoracoscopy - Video Assisted Thoracoscopic Surgery; VATS). In the last decade, the trend towards implementation of protocols to enhance patient recovery and diminish length of stay has been gaining popularity and increasing in prevalence. Those protocols are commonly referred to as fast track surgery or enhanced recovery after surgery protocol. The rationale behind these protocols is that by combining multimodal therapies that reduce surgical stress, having good pain control post-operatively, and involving the patient in this process, the treating team has the potential to reduce length of stay. In the last few years, many surgeons in their respective centers have implemented the use of fast track surgery in the thoracic surgery service. It has been shown to be a safe and effective method for managing postoperative patients after lobectomy. Fast track surgery is a systemic approach to the management of surgical patients, where all the different actions to take postoperatively are standardized and reproducible. Fast track surgery has the potential to diminish the rate of postoperative complications, the length of stay, and achieve a similar patient recovery. In an era, where medical costs are on the rise, hospital beds are limited and nursing staff not always available, fast track surgery has the potential to improve increase throughput, improve efficiency, decrease costs and improve surgical productivity. Currently, at the CHUM - Notre-Dame Hospital, there is no standardized patient care pathway for patients undergoing VATS lobectomy. The care given to patient prior to the implementation of this protocol was different amongst patients and depended on the surgeon's preferences. The implementation of this Enhanced Recovery Program (ERP) will permit a reproducible and routine management for patients following their surgery. The principal outcomes that will be compared amongst patients pre and post implementation of this protocol will be the length of stay and the number of complications. The investigators think that the results will be different between these two groups. The rational for this is due to the fact that the patients in this Enhanced Recovery Program will have: (1) their urinary catheter removed sooner, (2) their thoracic drain removed earlier and (3) they will be mobilized more quickly. These differences will enable these patients to potentially have less complications post operatively and decrease their hospital stay.
Minimum Age: 18 Years
Eligible Ages: ADULT, OLDER_ADULT
Sex: ALL
Healthy Volunteers: No
Centre Hospitalier de l'Université de Montréal, Montréal, Quebec, Canada
Name: Moishe Liberman, MD, PhD
Affiliation: Centre Hospitalier Universitaire de Montreal
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR