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Preoperative optimization for elective surgery in Crohn's disease: a narrative review

Hazel, Karl
Cooney, Rachel
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University Hospitals Birmingham NHS Foundation Trust; University of Birmingham
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Publication date
2025-02-26
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Abstract
Crohn's disease is a chronic inflammatory bowel disease and, despite an increase in the available drug treatments, many patients will still require surgery at some point in their disease course. Stricturing and penetrating phenotypes of Crohn's disease are less likely to respond to our current medical treatment and, therefore, surgical intervention may be required. This is most commonly elective, planned surgery, thereby affording the opportunity to optimize medications, nutritional and inflammatory status, and steroid use. Poor nutritional status and previous surgery increase the risk of postoperative complications. Preoperative optimization has three main goals: reduction of postoperative complications; reduction of reoperation rates; and reduction of postoperative recurrence rates. A literature search was completed using PubMed, Embase, and Ovid using the search term "preoperative optimization in Crohn's disease", and it included both adult and pediatric studies, excluding those for perianal Crohn's disease. In this narrative review, we examine the role of nutritional intervention, medical optimization pre and postoperatively, and the role of personalized prehabilitation in the reduction of postoperative complications. We demonstrate that these may all yield better postoperative outcomes for patients with Crohn's disease undergoing elective surgery, although the evidence is somewhat limited and there is a requirement for more prospective randomized controlled trials to implement their role into standard practice or guidelines.
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Hazel K, Cooney R. Preoperative Optimization for Elective Surgery in Crohn's Disease: A Narrative Review. J Clin Med. 2025 Feb 26;14(5):1576. doi: 10.3390/jcm14051576.
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