| Literature DB >> 24878776 |
Junlong Song1, Xiang Zhang1, Qiang Liu2, Jianheng Peng1, Xinjie Liang1, Yuanyuan Shen1, Hongtao Liu1, Hongyuan Li1.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: The objective of this study was to perform a meta-analysis of published studies for evaluating the impact of neoadjuvant chemotherapy (NAC) on immediate breast reconstruction.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24878776 PMCID: PMC4039499 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0098225
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Demographic characteristics and quality scores of studies included in the analysis.
| Author | Years ofdiagnosis | Country | Patients(NAC/Control) | Age(range; years) | NAC regimens | Follow-up | Reconstructiontype | Outcomes reported | NOSscore |
| Donker, 2011 | 2006–2009 | Netherlands | 48/215 | NAC: median 38 (20–62);Control: median 47 (25–70) | AC;Capecitabine+T | 6 weeks | E/I | Seroma, hematoma, infection,skin necrosis, surgicalre-intervention, implant loss | 8 |
| Jiménez-Puente,2011 | 2002–2009 | Spain | 13/102 | NA | FEC; AC-T | 9 months | E/I | Infection, seroma, dehiscence,hemorrhage, mechanicalcomplication, extrusion, necrosis | 6 |
| Radovanovic, 2010 | 2004–2008 | Serbia | 42/172 | mean 47 (26–69) | NA | 6 weeks | E/I | Epidermolysis, infection,skin necrosis, seromaformation, hematoma | 6 |
| Schaverien, 2013 | 2006–2012 | UK | 57/65 | NAC: mean 46.5 (35–54);Control: mean 49 (33–70) | AC-T | 8–35 months | Auto | Complete flap loss, hematoma,seroma, infection, donor sitebreakdown, fat necrosis,mastectomy skin flap necrosis,hospital-acquired pneumonia | 7 |
| Azzawi, 2010 | 2000–2007 | UK | 58/140 | NAC: mean 47.8 (29–68);Control: mean 50.4 (29–69) | EC-T; CMF-E;CMF; AT; AC | 7–64 months | E/I, Auto | Wound infection, slow healing,wound breakdown, fat necrosis,flap loss, partial flap necrosis,hematoma, infected implant,pulmonary embolism | 8 |
| Zweifel-Schlatter,2010 | 2007–2009 | UK | 49/58 | NAC: median 47 (31–68);Control: mean 49 (35–63) | FEC; AC-T | 30 days | Auto | Total or partial flap loss,hematoma, infection, woundhealing problem, woundbreakdown, seroma | 7 |
| Liu, 2009 | 2001–2007 | Japan | 12/63 | NAC: mean 45.3 (26–63);Control: mean 43.3 (30–57) | EC; FEC; T | NA | E/I | Flap necrosis, infection,seroma, hematoma | 7 |
| Godfrey, 1995 | NA | USA | 11/10 | NA | NA | >8 months | Auto | Seroma, lymphocoele, mastectomyflap slough, cellulitis | 5 |
| Decker, 2012 | 2005–2010 | USA | 380/8474 | NAC: mean 52.1±12.0;Control: mean 59.63±13.1 | NA | 30 days | NA | Wound complications (superficialsurgical site infection, deepinfection, wound dehiscence) | 6 |
| Hu, 2011 | 1997–2007 | USA | 42/214 | NA | AC; TAC; T | 60 days | E/I, Auto | Seroma, hematoma, surgical siteinfection, dehiscence, open wound,skin necrosis, flap loss | 6 |
| Peled, 2010 | 2005–2007 | USA | 57/65 | NAC: mean 46.4 (28–71);Control: mean 49.8 (25–70) | NA | 8–35 months | E/I, Auto | Infection, skin flap necrosis,flap loss, E/I loss, unplannedreturn to the operating room,donor-site complications | 7 |
Abbreviations: Auto, autologous; E/I, expander/implant; NA, not available; NAC, neoadjuvant chemotherapy; NOS, Newcastle-Ottawa Scale. NAC regimens: A, doxorubicin; C, cyclophosphamide; E, epirubicin; F, fluorouracil; M, methotrexate; T, taxotere.
Raw data showing the complications.
| Author | Reconstruction type | Patients | Totalcomplications | Hematomas | Seromas | Infections | E/I loss | Totalflap loss | Reoperations | ||||||||
| NAC | Control | NAC | Control | NAC | Control | NAC | Control | NAC | Control | NAC | Control | NAC | Control | NAC | Control | ||
| Donker, 2011 | E/I | 48 | 215 | 7/48 | 62/215 | 0/48 | 11/215 | 1/48 | 4/215 | 4/48 | 29/215 | 4/48 | 23/215 | NA | NA | 6/48 | 55/215 |
| Jiménez-Puente, 2011 | E/I | 13 | 102 | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA | 7/13 | 19/102 | NA | NA | NA | NA |
| Radovanovic, 2010 | E/I | 42 | 172 | 4/42 | 31/172 | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA | 3/42 | 9/172 | NA | NA | NA | NA |
| Schaverien, 2013 | Auto | 33 | 62 | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA | 1/33 | 1/62 | NA | NA | 1/33 | 1/62 | NA | NA |
| Azzawi, 2010 | E/I, Auto | 58 | 140 | NA | NA | 0/58 | 1/140 | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA | 5/58 | 13/140 |
| Zweifel-Schlatter, 2010 | Auto | 49 | 58 | NA | NA | 3/49 | 2/58 | 2/49 | 3/58 | 3/49 | 5/58 | NA | NA | 2/49 | 1/58 | NA | NA |
| Liu, 2009 | E/I | 12 | 63 | 3/12 | 19/63 | 1/12 | 3/63 | 0/12 | 2/63 | 1/12 | 2/63 | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA |
| Godfrey, 1995 | Auto | 11 | 10 | 2/11 | 6/10 | NA | NA | 0/11 | 1/10 | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA |
| Hu, 2011 | E/I, Auto | 42 | 214 | 15/42 | 80/214 | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA |
| Peled, 2010 | E/I, Auto | 57 | 65 | NA | NA | 5/57 | 1/65 | NA | NA | 13/57 | 16/65 | 8/31 | 8/45 | NA | NA | 19/57 | 18/65 |
Abbreviations: Auto, autologous; E/I, expander/implant; NA, not available; NAC, neoadjuvant chemotherapy.
Figure 1Flow chart of the study selection process.
Figure 2Pooled results of overall complications in patients treated with NAC.
The size of the solid squares is inversely proportional to the variance of the study estimate. The diamond represents the fixed effects odds ratio and 95% confidence interval.
Figure 3Pooled results of hematomas in patients treated with NAC.
The size of the solid squares is inversely proportional to the variance of the study estimate. The diamond represents the fixed effects odds ratio and 95% confidence interval.
Figure 4Pooled results of seromas in patients treated with NAC.
The size of the solid squares is inversely proportional to the variance of the study estimate. The diamond represents the fixed effects odds ratio and 95% confidence interval.
Figure 5Pooled results of infections in patients treated with NAC.
The size of the solid squares is inversely proportional to the variance of the study estimate. The diamond represents the fixed effects odds ratio and 95% confidence interval.
Figure 6Pooled results of reoperations in patients treated with NAC.
The size of the solid squares is inversely proportional to the variance of the study estimate. The diamond represents the fixed effects odds ratio and 95% confidence interval.
Figure 7Pooled results of E/I loss in patients treated with NAC.
The size of the solid squares is inversely proportional to the variance of the study estimate. The diamond represents the fixed effects odds ratio and 95% confidence interval.
Figure 8Funnel plot demonstrating the absence of publication bias among the studies that reported overall complications.