Does fluid-liberal intraoperative management increase postoperative complications such as atrial fibrillation in patients undergoing elective esophagectomy?
Liberal fluid administration during elective esophagectomy is associated with an increased risk of postoperative atrial fibrillation compared to fluid-restrictive strategies.
Esophagectomy remains a high-morbidity surgical procedure despite advances in perioperative care, with complications such as anastomotic leak, pneumonia, and atrial fibrillation contributing significantly to patient morbidity and prolonged hospital stay. Optimizing intraoperative hemodynamic management, including fluid balance and vasopressor administration, has been proposed as a modifiable factor to improve postoperative outcomes, but evidence remains limited. Recent analysis by Williams et al evaluated 639 patients undergoing elective esophagectomy, categorizing intraoperative strategies as fluid-restrictive versus fluid-liberal and vasopressor-low versus vasopressor-high. Although composite complication rates did not differ significantly across groups, patients managed by anesthesiologists with relatively liberal fluid administration exhibited higher adjusted rates of postoperative atrial fibrillation (27.2% vs 19.6%, OR: 1.60, P = 0.049). These findings highlight the potential impact of nuanced intraoperative management on specific adverse events and underscore the importance of individualized, patient-centered hemodynamic strategies. Future prospective studies and standardized reporting, consistent with TITAN guidelines, are warranted to guide perioperative decision-making and optimize postoperative care.
Anthony Mugisha (Tue,) studied this question.