| Literature DB >> 26637465 |
Michael P Dillon1, Stefania Fatone2, Matthew Quigley3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Helping people make well-informed decisions about dysvascular partial foot amputation is becoming increasingly important as improvements in diabetes care and vascular surgery make more distal amputations increasingly possible. The high rates of complications and reamputations associated with partial foot amputation are of concern, particularly given that transtibial amputation seems to result in similar outcomes (e.g., mobility and quality of life) with comparatively few complications and reamputations. The aim of this review is to describe the outcomes of dysvascular partial foot amputation and compare these to transtibial amputation. Results from the review are intended for use in the development of shared decision-making resources. METHODS/Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26637465 PMCID: PMC4670495 DOI: 10.1186/s13643-015-0161-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Syst Rev ISSN: 2046-4053
Example search for the CINAHL database to identify quality of life literature for people with dysvascular partial foot and transtibial amputation
| Search | Field code | Search term(s) |
|---|---|---|
| 1. | MH | “Amputation” |
| 2. | MH | “Amputees” |
| 3. | TI, AB, SU | (amput* AND (major OR lowerlimb* OR “lower limb”* OR “lower extremit*” OR “limb loss” OR LEA OR LLA)) |
| 4. | TI, AB, SU | (amput* AND (transtibial OR “trans tibial” OR belowknee OR “below knee” OR (below W2 knee) OR TTA OR BKA)) |
| 5. | TI, AB, SU | (amput* AND (minor OR “partial foot” OR Chopart* OR Lisfranc* OR tarsometatarsal OR transmetatarsal OR midtarsal OR “mid tarsal” OR midfoot OR “mid foot” OR ray OR phalangeal OR metatarsophalangeal OR toe* OR transtarsal OR “trans tarsal” OR TMT OR TMA OR MTP OR PFA)) |
| 6. | 1 OR 2 OR 3 OR 4 OR 5 | |
| 7. | TI, AB, SU | SF 36 OR SF36 OR “Medical Outcome* Study Short Form*” OR “Medical Outcome* Study Short-Form*” OR “MOS SF 36” OR “MOS SF36” OR “Sickness Impact Profile*” OR “SIP” ((“Trinity Amputation and Prosthe* Experience”) W1 (Survey OR Scale*)) OR TAPES OR “Prosthe* Evaluation Questionnaire” OR PEQ OR “WHO QOL BREF” OR “WHO QOLBREF” OR “WHOQOLBREF” OR ((WHO OR “World Health Organi#ation”) W1 (“Quality of Life BREF” OR “Quality of Life Scale”)) OR “RAND36” OR “RAND 36” OR “Orthotic*and Prosthetic* User* Survey” OR OPUS OR ((“Health Related”) W1 “Quality of Life”) OR HRQOL OR “Life Satisfaction Questionnaire* 9” OR “LiSat 9” OR “Satisfaction With Life Scale” OR SWLS OR “Quality of Well Being” OR QWB* OR “Quality of Life Index” OR QLI OR “EuroQOL*” OR “Euro QOL” OR EQ5D OR “EQ 5D” OR “Assessment of Quality of Life” OR AQoL OR (Orthotic* W2 “prosthetic* user* survey”) OR “Attitude to Artificial Limb* Questionnaire” OR AALQ |
| 8 | 6 AND 7 | |
| 9. | Limit 8 to English language | |
| 10. | Limit 9 to publication date: 01.01.2000 to 31.12.2015 | |
| 11. | Limit 10 to peer reviewed, academic journals |
Field codes: MH exact major and minor subject headings (MeSH, National Library of Medicine Medical Subject Headings), TI title, AB abstract, SU subject
Example table showing results of a quality appraisal for two quality of life (QoL) studies using the McMaster Critical Review Form for quantitative studies [45]
| Aim + background | Study design | Sample | Outcomes | Intervention | Results | Conclusion | ||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Study | A | B | C | D | E | F | G | H | I | J | K | L | M | N | O | P |
| Boutoille et al. [ | Case-control | 34 | Y | Y | Y | |||||||||||
| 25-9a | ||||||||||||||||
| Reviewer comments: Unclear description of aim and background. New results were presented in the discussion. QoL in the partial foot and transtibial amputee cohorts were compared to non-amputee cohort with foot ulceration but not to each other. Detailed sample demographic information was not provided. Co-intervention: the foot ulcer group was receiving active treatment while the amputee group had completed rehabilitation. Power bias present in assessment of capacity for inclusion, as the participants’ doctor decided if they were able to complete the survey. High risk of type-1 error due to multiple | ||||||||||||||||
| Peters et al. [ | Y | Y | Case-control | 124 | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | |||||||
| 35-89a | ||||||||||||||||
| Reviewer comments: Control bias: the case and control groups were significantly different in terms of: gender, duration of diabetes, and degree of neuropathy. QoL assessed with Sickness Impact Profile, focusing on functional status. Data pooled for persons with transtibial and transfemoral amputations (high level) and all levels of partial foot amputation (mid-level). A large variability in the results makes it difficult to detect meaningful differences. High chance of a Type 1 error given between group comparisons of multiple dependent variables. | ||||||||||||||||
Quality assessment items from McMaster University Critical Review Form—quantitative studies are listed as per the following key: A: Was the study purpose stated clearly?; B: Was relevant background literature reviewed?; C: Study design; D: Sample size (n) and the number of cases versus controls as applicable; E: Was the sample described in detail?; F: Was sample size justified?; G: Were the outcome measures reliable?; H: Were the outcome measures valid?; I: Was intervention described in detail?; J: Was contamination avoided?; K: Was co-intervention avoided?; L: Were results reported in terms of statistical significance?; M: Were the analysis method(s) appropriate?; N: Was clinical importance reported?; O: Were dropouts reported?; P: Were conclusions appropriate given study methods and results? Note: For clarity, only questions with affirmative responses have been shown
aNumber of cases versus controls