Division of General and Thoracic Surgery, The Hospital for Sick Children, Department of Surgery, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
Ariadne Labs, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, Boston, Massachusetts.
JAMA Surg. 2024 Sep 1;159(9):1071-1078. doi: 10.1001/jamasurg.2024.2044.
Neonates requiring surgery are often cared for in neonatal intensive care units (NICUs). Despite a breadth of surgical pathology, neonates share many perioperative priorities that allow for the development of unit-wide evidence-based Enhanced Recovery After Surgery (ERAS) recommendations.
The guideline development committee included pediatric surgeons, anesthesiologists, neonatal nurses, and neonatologists in addition to ERAS content and methodology experts. The patient population was defined as neonates (first 28 days of life) undergoing a major noncardiac surgical intervention while admitted to a NICU. After the first round of a modified Delphi technique, 42 topics for potential inclusion were developed. There was consensus to develop a search strategy and working group for 21 topic areas. A total of 5763 abstracts were screened, of which 98 full-text articles, ranging from low to high quality, were included. A total of 16 recommendations in 11 topic areas were developed with a separate working group commissioned for analgesia-related recommendations. Topics included team communication, preoperative fasting, temperature regulation, antibiotic prophylaxis, surgical site skin preparation, perioperative ventilation, fluid management, perioperative glucose control, transfusion thresholds, enteral feeds, and parental care encouragement. Although clinically relevant, there were insufficient data to develop recommendations concerning the use of nasogastric tubes, Foley catheters, and central lines.
Despite varied pathology, neonatal perioperative care within NICUs allows for unit-based ERAS recommendations independent of the planned surgical procedure. The 16 recommendations within this ERAS guideline are intended to be implemented within NICUs to benefit all surgical neonates.
需要手术的新生儿通常在新生儿重症监护病房 (NICU) 接受治疗。尽管有广泛的手术病理学,但新生儿有许多围手术期的重点,这使得制定基于单位的术后恢复加速(ERAS)建议成为可能。
指南制定委员会包括小儿外科医生、麻醉师、新生儿护士和新生儿科医生,以及 ERAS 内容和方法学专家。患者人群定义为在 NICU 住院期间接受重大非心脏手术干预的新生儿(生命的头 28 天)。在经过一轮修改后的 Delphi 技术后,制定了 42 个潜在纳入的主题。有共识制定搜索策略和工作组,涵盖 21 个主题领域。共筛选了 5763 篇摘要,其中 98 篇全文文章,质量从低到高,均被纳入。在 11 个主题领域制定了 16 项建议,其中包括与镇痛相关的建议,由一个单独的工作组负责。主题包括团队沟通、术前禁食、体温调节、抗生素预防、手术部位皮肤准备、围手术期通气、液体管理、围手术期血糖控制、输血阈值、肠内喂养和鼓励父母照顾。尽管具有临床相关性,但缺乏足够的数据来制定关于使用鼻胃管、 Foley 导管和中心静脉导管的建议。
尽管病理情况各不相同,但 NICU 中的新生儿围手术期护理允许基于单位的 ERAS 建议,而无需考虑计划的手术程序。本 ERAS 指南中的 16 项建议旨在 NICU 中实施,以造福所有接受手术的新生儿。