Journal Article10.1097/01.AOA.0000575072.88651.E7
Guidelines for Postoperative Care in Cesarean Delivery: Enhanced Recovery After Surgery (ERAS) Society Recommendations (Part 3)
Aaron B. Caughey,Stephen Wood,George A. Macones,I.J. Wrench,J. Huang,Mikael Norman,Karin Pettersson,William Fawcett,Medhat M. Shalabi,Amy Metcalfe,Leah Gramlich,Gregg Nelson,R.D. Wilson +12 more
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TL;DR: This special report focused on the period beginning 30 to 60 minutes before the start of the procedure (decision to operate) and ending at hospital discharge, and created recommendations based on clinical evidence that allow physicians to learn, modify, and improve their care processes, leading to improved patient health outcomes.
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Abstract: T his is the second document in a series of 3 focused on the Enhanced Recovery After Surgery (ERAS) care program, specifically in regards to cesarean delivery (CD) and its intraoperative care. ERAS has both clinical benefits (decreased length of stay, complications, and readmissions) and decreased cost of care. This special report focused on the period beginning 30 to 60 minutes before the start of the procedure (decision to operate) and ending at hospital discharge. The ERAS CD program provides audit and feedback cycles for both scheduled and unscheduled CD, and creates recommendations based on clinical evidence that allow physicians to learn, modify, and improve their care processes, leading to improved patient health outcomes. The ERAS Society author group was assembled in May 2017, topics were allocated to specific authors depending on expertise, and a literature search was conducted (1966-2017). Embase and Pubmed were searched for meta-analyses, systematic reviews, randomized controlled studies, nonrandomized controlled studies, reviews, and case series. Search terms included cesarean section, CD, cesarean section delivery, and all intraoperative ERAS items. Articles were screened by individual authors and then graded for quality via the Grading of Recommendations, Assessment, Development and Evaluation system (high, moderate, low, and very low quality). Final recommendations were then created and any discrepancies were resolved by lead and senior authors (A.B.C. and R.D.W.). The recommendations focused on preoperative antimicrobial prophylaxis and skin preparation (wound preparation, vaginal preparation), preoperative and intraoperative anesthetic management, prevention of intraoperative hypothermia, CD surgical techniques and considerations (surgical incision, repair of incision), perioperative fluid management, and immediate care of the newborn infant. Routine intravenous antibiotics, such as a first-generation cephalosporin, are administered within 60 minutes before CD skin incision. Cochrane reviews have reported significant reduction in composite maternal infectious morbidity with this practice (risk ratio, 0.57; 95% confidence interval, 0.45-0.72). Women in labor or with ruptured membranes may also receive azithromycin, as there is strong evidence that azithromycin significantly reduces postoperative infections (P<0.001). For wound preparation, chlorhexidine-alcohol is preferred over an aqueous povidone-iodine solution (strong evidence). For vaginal preparations, a povidone-iodine solution can be considered to reduce infection, but the evidence supporting this practice is only moderate (recommendation grade: weak). Recommendations for surgical technique include blunt expansion of the transverse uterine hysterotomy, closure of the hysterotomy in 2 layers, nonclosure of the peritoneum, reapproximation of the tissue layer in women with ≥2 cm subcutaneous tissue, and use of a subcuticular suture to reduce wound separation. However, it is of note that the evidence levels are moderate and the recommendation grades are weak for all of these interventions. Regional anesthesia is the preferred method for CD over general anesthesia. Regional anesthesia improves pain control, organ function, mobility, and postoperative nausea and vomiting and also lowers risks of blood loss and postoperative sedation (recommendation grade: strong). Perioperative hypothermia occurs in 50% to 80% of patients undergoing spinal anesthesia for CD. In addition to monitoring patient temperature, forced air warming, intravenous fluid warming, and increasing operating room temperature can help to prevent hypothermia during CD (recommendation grade: strong). Euvolemia preoperatively and intraoperatively are associated with improved maternal and neonatal outcomes. Neonatal care should consist of delayed cord clamping by at least 1 minute for term delivery and at least 30 seconds for a preterm delivery, maintenance of neonate body temperature between 36.5°C and 37.5°C after birth, avoidance of routine airway suctioning (suctioning should be used only in cases of obstructed airway) and supplementation of room air as inspired air with oxygen may be associated with harm, and availability of immediate neonatal resuscitation procedures. The grades of all the neonatal recommendations are strong. The frequency of CD in the United States increased from 4.5% in 1970 to 31.9% in 2015, and is the most common surgery performed in the country. Multiple repeat CDs carry increasing risks for complications such as wound and uterine hematoma, placenta previa, blood transfusion, etc. Therefore, it is essential that CD pathways are well understood, evaluated, and optimized by maternity care teams. In this special report, a focused ERAS CD pathway clinical audit tool has been created composed of 5 preoperative, 4 intraoperative, and 9 postoperative focused elements. Clinicians should adopt and incorporate these into best practices, with the ultimate goal of reducing costs and risks while improving resources and maternal and neonatal outcomes.
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Citations
Guidelines for postoperative care in cesarean delivery: Enhanced Recovery After Surgery (ERAS) Society recommendations (part 3)
George A. Macones,Aaron B. Caughey,Stephen Wood,I.J. Wrench,Jeffrey Huang,Mikael Norman,Karin Pettersson,William Fawcett,Medhat M. Shalabi,Amy Metcalfe,Leah Gramlich,Gregg Nelson,R. Douglas Wilson +12 more
TL;DR: A number of elements of postoperative care of women undergoing cesarean delivery are recommended based on the evidence and specifics include sham feeding, nausea and vomiting prevention, post-operative analgesia, nutritional care, glucose control, thromboembolism prophylaxis, early mobilization, urinary drainage, and discharge counseling.
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Society for Obstetric Anesthesia and Perinatology: Consensus Statement and Recommendations for Enhanced Recovery After Cesarean.
Laurent Bollag,Grace Lim,Pervez Sultan,Ashraf S. Habib,Ruth Landau,Mark I. Zakowski,Mohamed Tiouririne,Sumita Bhambhani,Brendan Carvalho +8 more
TL;DR: A summary of the Enhanced Recovery After Cesarean delivery (ERAC) protocol written by a Society for Obstetric Anesthesia and Perinatology (SOAP) committee and approved by the SOAP Board of Directors in May 2019 is provided.
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Opportunities and Challenges for the Next Phase of Enhanced Recovery After Surgery: A Review.
Olle Ljungqvist,Hans Donald De Boer,Angie Balfour,William Fawcett,Dileep N. Lobo,Dileep N. Lobo,Gregg Nelson,Michael J. Scott,Thomas Wainwright,Nicolas Demartines +9 more
TL;DR: Enhanced Recovery After Surgery (ERAS) is a global surgical quality improvement initiative now firmly entrenched within the field of perioperative care as discussed by the authors, which is associated with significant clinical outcome improvements and cost savings in numerous surgical specialties, several opportunities and challenges deserve further discussion.
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Enhanced recovery after surgery at cesarean delivery to reduce postoperative length of stay: a randomized controlled trial
Nickolas Teigen,Nicole Sahasrabudhe,Georgios Doulaveris,Xianhong Xie,Abdissa Negassa,Jeffrey I. Bernstein,Peter S. Bernstein +6 more
TL;DR: Evidence that ERAS after cesarean may have the potential to improve outcomes such as day of discharge are suggested by the observed reduction in overall postoperative LOS, improved patient satisfaction and an increase in breastfeeding rates.
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Transversus Abdominis Plane Block With Liposomal Bupivacaine for Pain After Cesarean Delivery in a Multicenter, Randomized, Double-Blind, Controlled Trial.
Srdjan S. Nedeljkovic,Attila G Kett,Manuel C. Vallejo,Jean-Louis Horn,Brendan Carvalho,Xiaodong Bao,Naida M. Cole,Leslie A. Renfro,Jeff Gadsden,Jia Song,Julia Yang,Ashraf S. Habib +11 more
TL;DR: Results suggest that with correct TAP block placement and adherence to a multimodal postsurgical analgesic regimen, there is an opioid-reducing benefit of adding LB to bupivacaine TAP blocks after cesarean delivery.
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References
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TL;DR: Closure of the subcutaneous fat may reduce wound complications but it is unclear to what extent these differences affect the well-being and satisfaction of the women concerned.
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TL;DR: The general principles of the ERAS guidelines are summarized and workload is distributed among the different members of the care team, providing an easier way to involve key personnel in theERAS process and assigns a role for everyone in making ERAS a success.
A systematic review and meta-analysis of a brief delay in clamping the umbilical cord of preterm infants.
TL;DR: The procedure of a delayed cord clamping time of at least 30 s is safe to use and does not compromise the preterm infant in the initial post-partum adaptation phase.