# Promoting postoperative recovery in older adult surgical patients: a randomized controlled trial of MDT-based perioperative comprehensive nutritional management model

**Authors:** Qi An, Yonghao Li, Jinxin Shi, Chengyu Liu, Zijian Li, Liru Chen, Linlin Gao, Lei Li, Qingmei Liu, Hongyuan Cui, Huan Xi, Mingwei Zhu

PMC · DOI: 10.3389/fnut.2025.1684807 · Frontiers in Nutrition · 2026-01-12

## TL;DR

A multidisciplinary team approach to nutrition and care helps older adults recover faster after major surgery.

## Contribution

Demonstrates the effectiveness of MDT-based perioperative care in reducing complications and improving recovery in older surgical patients.

## Key findings

- The intervention group had significantly lower postoperative complications and shorter hospital stays.
- Improved body composition and mobility were observed in the MDT-based care group.
- Functional recovery and pain relief were enhanced in the intervention group compared to standard care.

## Abstract

Traditional perioperative care is hospital-centric, whereas the efficacy of multidisciplinary team (MDT)-based comprehensive nutrition management remains debated. This study examines how this model impacts postoperative complications and functional recovery in older adults.

A single-center superiority randomized controlled trial (RCT; April 2023–March 2024) randomized 120 older adults (≥65y) undergoing major abdominal surgery (grades 3–4) into intervention (n = 60) and control (n = 60) groups, excluding those with severe organ dysfunction or poor compliance. The MDT-based model included personalized exercise, nutrition, psychological support (3 weekly sessions, smoking/alcohol cessation), and post-discharge monitoring via wearables/WeChat. Control group received standard care.

Among 120 participants (mean age 72.6 years; 65.2% male), 5 were lost to follow-up, leaving 56 in the intervention group and 59 in the control group for analysis. The intervention group demonstrated significantly lower postoperative complications compared to controls, with a relative reduction in in-hospital events and lower post-discharge rates (3.6% vs. 6.8%). The Comprehensive Complication Index averaged 6.2 points lower in the intervention group (p = 0.175). Body composition improved significantly, showing reduced weight loss, reduced BMI loss, and increased appendicular skeletal muscle mass index. Postoperative hospital stay was shortened by a median of 3.67 days in the intervention group, which also reported higher rates of mobility improvement and pain relief (all p < 0.05).

The MDT-based perioperative model synergistically reduces postoperative complications and accelerates geriatric functional recovery through nutritional, exercise, and psychological interventions, providing evidence-based support for high-risk elderly care.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** weight loss (MESH:D015431), postoperative complications (MESH:D011183), pain (MESH:D010146), organ dysfunction (MESH:D009102)
- **Chemicals:** alcohol (MESH:D000438)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

21 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12832283/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12832283