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Multimodal Prehabilitation for Gynecologic Cancer Surgeryopen access

Authors
Kim, JeongyunLee, Chae HyeongYim, Ga Won
Issue Date
Feb-2025
Publisher
MDPI
Keywords
cancer; frailty; gynecologic surgery; postoperative complications; prehabilitation; preoperative care
Citation
Current Oncology, v.32, no.2, pp 1 - 15
Pages
15
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
Current Oncology
Volume
32
Number
2
Start Page
1
End Page
15
URI
https://scholarworks.dongguk.edu/handle/sw.dongguk/57955
DOI
10.3390/curroncol32020109
ISSN
1198-0052
1718-7729
Abstract
Surgical treatment is commonly employed to treat patients with gynecologic cancer, although surgery itself may function as a stressor, reducing the patients' functional capacity and recovery. Prehabilitation programs attempt to improve patients' overall health and baseline function prior to surgery, thereby enhancing recovery and lowering morbidity. In recent years, prehabilitation has come to primarily refer to multimodal programs that combine physical activity, nutritional support, psychological well-being, and other medical interventions. However, the specific methods of implementing prehabilitation and measuring its effectiveness are heterogeneous. Moreover, high-level evidence regarding prehabilitation in gynecologic cancer surgery is limited. This review provides a summary of multimodal prehabilitation studies in gynecologic oncologic surgery. Enhanced postoperative recovery, lower postoperative complications, lower rate of blood transfusions, and faster gastrointestinal functional recovery have been reported after multimodal prehabilitation interventions. Patients and healthcare professionals should recognize the importance of prehabilitation in the field of gynecologic oncologic treatment, based on the emerging evidence. In addition, there is a need to establish an appropriate target group and construct a well-designed and tailored prehabilitation program.
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