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Iron-deficiency Anaemia and Its Impact on Recovery After Colorectal Cancer Surgery
Sponsor: Oncology Institute of Vojvodina
Summary
The aim of this prospective, observational cohort study is to assess the impact of iron deficiency anaemia on the incidence of perioperative complications and the quality of recovery after surgery in patients undergoing colorectal cancer surgery. The main questions the study aims to answer are: * whether the presence of preoperative iron deficiency anaemia leads to a poorer quality of postoperative recovery in patients undergoing colorectal cancer surgery * whether different combinations of complete blood count parameters (red blood cell indices) could be suitable diagnostic tools for the detection of iron deficiency in the latent stage (without laboratory-confirmed anaemia) in colorectal cancer patients. Blood samples for laboratory analyses will be collected from each study patient admitted to the surgical ward one day prior to elective surgery and on the first postoperative day during the stay in the intensive care unit. The pre-operative laboratory analyses include a complete blood count and serum iron status parameters (iron concentration, ferritin concentration, TIBC, UIBC and TSAT). Laboratory parameters analysed on the first postoperative day include complete blood count, serum concentration of electrolytes (Na, K, Ca, Cl, Mg), serum concentration of urea and creatinine, parameters of haemostasis (aPTT, PT, INR), serum concentration of C-reactive protein and procalcitonin. Data about overall morbidity, intraoperative complications, quality of postoperative recovery, red blood cell transfusion rate, all-cause infection rate, antibiotic usage, as well as length of hospital stay will be collected. The researchers will compare the group of patients with iron deficiency anaemia, the group of patients with iron deficiency in the latent stage and the control group to determine whether patients with iron deficiency have a higher incidence of perioperative complications and impaired recovery after surgery. The researchers will investigate whether iron deficiency can be detected at an early stage, when anaemia is not yet present, by calculating various red blood cell indices.
Official title: Preoperative Evaluation and Impact of Iron Deficiency Anaemia on the Incidence of Perioperative Complications and Quality of Recovery After Radical Colorectal Cancer Surgery
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
18 Years - Any
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
200
Start Date
2024-06-03
Completion Date
2026-01
Last Updated
2025-06-04
Healthy Volunteers
No
Interventions
Laboratory analyses for the detection of iron deficiency anaemia
Erythrocyte indices based on the preoperative complete blood count results will be calculated for each patient one day prior to surgical treatment. Overall morbidity of each patient during hospital stay will be scored using the Comprehensive Complication Index (CCI). Intraoperative complications will be graded according to the ClassIntra classification of intraoperative adverse events. The quality of postoperative recovery of each observed patient will be scored on the first, second and fifth postoperative day, using the 15-item quality of recovery scale (QoR-15). Data about red blood cell transfusion rate, all-cause infection rate, number of days when antibiotics were administered and the number of different antibiotics administered during hospital-stay will be collected.
Locations (1)
Oncology Institute of Vojvodina
Kamenitz, Serbia