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Standardized Perioperative Protocols Are Associated With Reduced Length of Stay and Readmission in Cushing Disease: Results From the Multicenter RAPID Study
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Standardized Perioperative Protocols Are Associated With Reduced Length of Stay and Readmission in Cushing Disease: Results From the Multicenter RAPID Study

Carter M Suryadevara, Jorge E Salcedo-Sifuentes, Andrew S Little, Kevin C J Yuen, Michelle Magana Mendoza, Paul Gardner, Georgios Zenonos, Julie M Silverstein, Albert H Kim, James J Evans, …
Neurosurgery
04/21/2026
PMID: 42012163

Abstract

Perioperative protocol Endoscopic endonasal surgery Rapid recovery protocol Fluid restriction Multicenter study Pituitary adenoma Cushing disease
Perioperative protocols facilitate earlier discharge without compromising safety in nonfunctioning pituitary adenomas, but no large multicenter studies in the United States have investigated protocols regarding Cushing disease (CD). We sought to characterize perioperative protocols and how their implementation influences clinical outcomes in patients with CD. A retrospective analysis was conducted using data from the Registry of Adenomas of the Pituitary and Related Disorders consortium comprising 13 US academic pituitary centers. Institutions were surveyed regarding perioperative procedures for patients undergoing transsphenoidal tumor resection for CD. The impacts of institutional procedures and approaches to implementation on length of stay (LOS) and unplanned 90-day readmission were evaluated. Thirteen institutions contributed survey responses and clinical data for a total of 832 patients meeting inclusion criteria. Ten (76.9%) institutions reported having a postoperative protocol, 9 (69.2%) used a formal document to outline their protocol, and 3 (23.1%) had protocols implemented into hospital policy. Mean LOS was significantly reduced in centers with an established protocol (3.14 vs 3.42 days, P = .032), and more so with a formal document (3.10 vs 3.48 days, P = .001) or hospital policy (2.72 vs 3.36 days, P < .001). Patients treated after protocol implementation experienced shorter LOS (P < .001). Other factors associated with reduced LOS were presence of a separate CD pathway, intraoperative checklist specific to pituitary surgery, non-narcotic pain regimen, Foley removal order, dedicated outpatient advanced practice provider follow-up, and target discharge date ≤2 days. Intraoperative checklist (P = .045), non-narcotic pain regimen (P = .048), nasal packing (P = .005), and 1-day target discharge date (P = .032) were important factors against readmission. Compared with microscopic surgery, endoscopic surgery was associated with shorter LOS but increased readmission odds. This is the first multicenter study to illustrate that implementation of perioperative protocols is associated with a reduction in LOS and readmission risk in patients with CD.

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