# Effects of Exercise-Based Prehabilitation on Functional Capacity in Gastrointestinal Cancer Surgery: A Network Meta-Analysis

**Authors:** Minjae Seo, Seokjun Cho, Eunbi Kim, Jooyeol In, Jaesung Lee, Jungmin Lee, Jonghoon Park, Jae-Seok Min

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/jcm15031274 · Journal of Clinical Medicine · 2026-02-05

## TL;DR

This study finds that facility-based exercise prehabilitation improves post-surgery function in gastrointestinal cancer patients more than home-based programs.

## Contribution

The study compares facility-based and home-based prehabilitation using network meta-analysis in gastrointestinal cancer surgery.

## Key findings

- Exercise prehabilitation improved postoperative functional capacity compared to control.
- Facility-based prehabilitation showed significant improvement in functional capacity.
- Home-based prehabilitation did not show statistically significant effects.

## Abstract

Objectives: This study aimed to compare the effects of facility-based and home-based exercise prehabilitation on postoperative functional capacity and postoperative outcomes in patients undergoing gastrointestinal cancer surgery using a network meta-analysis. Methods: This systematic review and network meta-analysis included randomized controlled trials of exercise-based prehabilitation in patients undergoing gastrointestinal cancer surgery. Facility-based and home-based exercise interventions were compared using random-effects models to evaluate postoperative functional capacity, overall complications, and length of stay. Certainty of evidence was assessed using the CINeMA framework. Results: Nine randomized controlled trials were included. Exercise-based prehabilitation significantly improved postoperative functional capacity compared with control in pairwise meta-analysis (MD = 26.10 m; 95% CI 4.59 to 47.62). In network meta-analysis, facility-based exercise prehabilitation significantly improved postoperative functional capacity compared with control (MD = 24.11 m; 95% CI 2.01 to 46.22), whereas home-based prehabilitation showed no statistically significant effect (MD = 32.12 m; 95% CI −1.70 to 65.93). Conclusions: This study suggests that exercise prehabilitation may be an effective strategy for improving or preserving postoperative functional capacity in patients undergoing gastrointestinal cancer surgery, with facility-based exercise prehabilitation showing more consistent and statistically significant effects.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** Gastrointestinal Cancer (MESH:D005770)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

44 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12897731/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12897731