Table 1.
Standard of care at commencement of study | Changes to care by quartile |
---|---|
Preoperative care | No changes |
Admission on day of surgery | |
Oral carbohydrate loading | |
No bowel preparation or routine use of premedication | |
Prophylactic antibiotics on induction and at closure if the duration of surgery exceeds 180 min | |
Intraoperative care | Quartile 1 |
Anaesthesia with volatile anaesthetic, short-acting opioids and anti-emetics | From hepatic resection 14: switch from epidural analgesia to intrathecal morphine because of inability to provide an appropriate post-epidural care package18 |
Intravenous fluids: titrated against central venous pressure (central venous pressure targeted at <5 cmH2O intraoperatively, then 8 cmH2O in the early postoperative period) | From hepatic resection 27: introduction of bolus delivery (intermittent) wound catheters with 40 ml 0.2% ropivacaine every 6 h for 3 days with a 3-mg/kg loading dose at the time of closure |
Intraoperative hypothermia was minimized by use of upper and lower body warming devices | Quartile 3 |
All resections were performed by open surgery using transverse incisions | From hepatic resection 79: commercial continuous delivery system of 0.2% ropivacaine |
Not used routinely: drains, nasogastric tubes | |
Postoperative care | Quartile 1 |
Deep vein thrombosis prophylaxis (20–40 mg enoxaparin subcutaneously from the evening of surgery) | From hepatic resection 8: routine use of NSAIDs with omeprazole cover at 24 h postoperatively |
Analgesia: paracetamol 1 g q.i.d. | |
Opioid-based patient-controlled analgesia | |
Anti-emetics as required | |
Not used routinely: laxatives, diuretics, immunonutrition, gabapentin19 | |
Eat and drink as tolerated without restriction from day 0 | |
Early mobilization | |
Urinary catheter removed at day 1 |
NSAIDs, non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs.