| Literature DB >> 28261622 |
C M Stekelenburg1,2, R E Marck1,3,4, P D H M Verhaegen1,4,5, K W Marck6, P P M van Zuijlen1,4.
Abstract
Patients with burn scars often experience functional problems because of scar contractures. Surgical treatment may be indicated for those burn scar contractures. If the contractures are small and linear, the contraction bands can be treated with local transposition flaps like the Z-plasty. Broader, diffuse contractures are more challenging and require a different surgical approach, such as the use of local tissue. The use of perforator-based flaps is promising; however, their true clinical significance for this type of burn reconstructions still needs to be determined. Therefore, we performed a review to evaluate the role of perforator-based flaps for burn scar contracture treatment. Electronic databases were searched using a predefined search strategy. Studies evaluating the long-term outcome of perforator-based flaps for the treatment of burn scar contractures were included. The methodological quality was tested and data was summarized. Five hundred and ten papers were identified of which eleven met the inclusion criteria. One study was a randomized controlled trial; ten were cohort studies of a pre-postoperative design. The papers described outcomes of free flaps and local flaps. Most studies had methodological shortcomings and used inappropriate statistical methods. Perforator-based interposition flaps appear to be highly relevant for burn scar contracture treatment. However, due to the paucity and low quality of the studies that were assessed, no definitive conclusions about the true clinical significance could be reached. And therefore, only recommendations could be given for improvement of the quality of further primary research on the effectiveness of perforator-based flaps for burn scar contracture release.Entities:
Keywords: Burn; Contracture; Perforator flap; Scar
Year: 2017 PMID: 28261622 PMCID: PMC5329961 DOI: 10.1186/s41038-017-0071-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Burns Trauma ISSN: 2321-3868
Summary of outcome in included studies
| Study | Mean follow-up (range) | Short-term follow-up | Long-term follow-up | Statistical analysis | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Necrosis flap (%) | ROM measurement | Increase in ROM (preop → postop) | Increase in flap size | Outcome measures validated? | |||
| Ogawa [ | 5 years (1–8) | 5/32 (16%) partial | – | – | – | – | No |
| Er [ | Not mentioned | 0/15 (0%) | Shoulder abduction | 112° (47 → 159) | – | Goniometry: retrospective chart review | No |
| Tsai [ | 11 months | 0/40 (0%) | Neck extension | 24° (92 → 116) | 15–38% ↑ flap width at 11 months | Geometry/planimetry | No |
| Lateral flexion | 10° (26 → 36) | ||||||
| Ogawa [ | Not mentioned | 4/41 (10%) partial | – | – | – | – | No |
| 1/41 (2%) complete | |||||||
| Rashid [ | 22 months (12–48) | 2/27 (7%) epidermiolysis | – | – | 63% ↑ flap width at 1 year | Geometry/planimetry | No |
| Waterston [ | 9 months (2–60) | 1/23 (4%) complete | – | – | Stretching of flap was observed | – | No |
| Verhaegen [ | 8 months (3–14) | 4/22 (18%) partial | – | – | 16% ↑ flap surface area at 8 months | Planimetry | Yes |
| Tucker [ | Not mentioned | 3/22 (14%) partial | – | – | – | – | No |
| Wang [ | Not mentioned (range 1–5 years) | 0/15 (0%) | Neck extension and lateral flexion compared to normal ROM | Postoperative extension and lateral flexion not significantly differing from normal ROM | – | Flap geometry, measurement of cervical motion (Photo Measures software) | Yes |
| Li [ | >1 year | 1/15 (7%) partial | Neck extension | Neck extension >110° in all patients | – | Goniometry | No |
ROM: range of motion
Quality assessment using the New Castle-Ottowa scale
| Study | Year | Study type | Selection | Comparability | Outcome | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Representativeness of the exposed cohort | Selection of the non-exprosed cohort | Ascertainment of exposure | Outcome of interest not present at start | Comparability of the cohorts | Assessment of outcome | Follow-up long enough | Adequacy of follow-up of cohorts | |||
| Ogawa [ | 2004 | Cohort—retrospective | * | * | ||||||
| Er [ | 2005 | Cohort—pre-postoperative design | * | * | ||||||
| Tsai [ | 2006 | Cohort—pre-postoperative design | * | * | * | * | * | |||
| Ogawa [ | 2006 | Cohort—retrospective | * | * | ||||||
| Rashid [ | 2006 | Cohort—pre-postoperative design | * | * | * | * | ||||
| Waterson [ | 2008 | Cohort—retrospective | * | * | ||||||
| Verhaegen [ | 2011 | Cohort—pre-postoperative design | * | * | * | * | * | |||
| Tucker [ | 2011 | Cohort—retrospective | * | |||||||
| Wang [ | 2014 | Cohort—pre-postoperative design | * | * | * | * | ||||
| Li [ | 2015 | Cohort—retrospective | * | * | * | * | * | |||
| Stekelenburg [ | 2017 | RCT | * | * | * | * | * | * | * | * |
A star (*) indicates that a measure was adequately addressed in this study. A study could be awarded a maximum of one star for each numbered item within the Selection and Exposure categories. A maximum of two stars could be given for Comparability.