4.5 Review

Evidence-based strategies to reduce the incidence of postoperative delirium: a narrative review

Journal

ANAESTHESIA
Volume 77, Issue -, Pages 92-101

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/anae.15607

Keywords

anaesthesia for older people; delirium; geriatric assessment; peri-operative medicine; postoperative complications

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Delirium is a common complication in older adults after surgery due to vulnerability of cerebral functioning. Early identification of high-risk patients provides an opportunity for intervention and shared decision-making. Multi-component interventions involving risk factor modification and geriatrician input are effective in preventing delirium.
Delirium is one of the most commonly occurring postoperative complications in older adults. It occurs due to the vulnerability of cerebral functioning to pathophysiological stressors. Identification of those at increased risk of developing delirium early in the surgical pathway provides an opportunity for modification of predisposing and precipitating risk factors and effective shared decision-making. No single delirium prediction tool is used widely in surgical settings. Multi-component interventions to prevent delirium involve structured risk factor modification supported by geriatrician input; these are clinically efficacious and cost effective. Barriers to the widespread implementation of such complex interventions exist, resulting in an 'implementation gap'. There is a lack of evidence for pharmacological prophylaxis for the prevention of delirium. Current evidence suggests that avoidance of peri-operative benzodiazepines, careful titration of anaesthetic depth guided by processed electroencephalogram monitoring and treatment of pain are the most effective strategies to minimise the risk of delirium. Addressing postoperative delirium requires a collaborative, whole pathway approach, beginning with the early identification of those patients who are at risk. The research agenda should continue to examine the potential for pharmacological prophylaxis to prevent delirium while also addressing how successful models of delirium prevention can be translated from one setting to another, underpinned by implementation science methodology.

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