Consumer Wearables Define a Normative Recovery Trajectory Following the Modified Nuss Procedure

The modified Nuss procedure is an elective procedure associated with a lengthy recovery, uncontrolled pain, and risk of infrequent, yet life-threatening complications. The absence of objective measures of normative postoperative recovery creates uncertainty about the postdischarge period, which rema...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Journal of surgical research 2023-12, Vol.292, p.7-13
Hauptverfasser: Carter, Michela, Linton, Samuel, Zeineddin, Suhail, Pitt, J. Benjamin, Figueroa, Angie, Perez, Amparo, Park, Erica, DeTella, Mia, Kwon, Soyang, Goldstein, Seth D., Ghomrawi, Hassan, Abdullah, Fizan
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The modified Nuss procedure is an elective procedure associated with a lengthy recovery, uncontrolled pain, and risk of infrequent, yet life-threatening complications. The absence of objective measures of normative postoperative recovery creates uncertainty about the postdischarge period, which remains highly dependent on the patients' and their caregivers’ expectations and management of recovery. We aimed to describe an objective-normative, physical activity recovery trajectory after the modified Nuss procedure, using step counts from the Fitbit. This observational study enrolled children ≤18 y with pectus excavatum who underwent the modified Nuss procedure from 2021 to 2022. The Fitbit was worn for 21 postoperative days. Postdischarge outcomes and health-care utilization were evaluated. For patients without postoperative complications, piecewise linear regression analysis was conducted to generate a normative recovery trajectory model of daily step counts. Of 80 patients enrolled, 66 (86%) met eligibility criteria (mean age, 15.1 ± 1.3 y; 89.4% male, 62.1% non-Hispanic White). The mean number of telephone and electronic message encounters regarding concerns with the patient's recovery within 30 d postoperatively was 2.1 (standard deviation = 2.7). Ten patients (15.2%) returned to the emergency department (ED) within the 30-d postoperative period. Seven patients (10.6%) presented to the ED one time, and three patients (4.5%) presented to the ED twice. Thirty-day readmission rate was four patients (6.0%). Piecewise regression model showed that patients without complications steadily increased their daily step count on each postoperative day and plateaued on day 18. We have developed a normative recovery trajectory following the modified Nuss procedure using step count data collected by a consumer wearable device. This offers the potential to inform preoperative patient expectations and reduce avoidable health-care utilization through informed preoperative counseling, thus laying the ground work for the use of consumer wearable devices as a postdischarge remote monitoring tool. •In this observational study of 66 patients, daily step count after surgery increased steadily for 18 d after which they plateaued, suggesting there is an objective-normative, physical activity recovery trajectory specific to the modified Nuss procedure.•This objective-normative, physical activity recovery trajectory offers the potential to reduce avoidable health-care utilization th
ISSN:0022-4804
1095-8673
DOI:10.1016/j.jss.2023.07.002