| Literature DB >> 31817811 |
Elvin T Ng1,2, Russell Z Ang2, Bach X Tran3,4, Cyrus S Ho5, Zhisong Zhang1,6, Wanqiu Tan6,7, Yu Bai1, Min Zhang1, Wilson W Tam8, Roger C Ho1,6,9,10.
Abstract
: The purpose of our study was to carry out a meta-analysis of current literature to determine whether total mastectomy and breast-conserving surgery induce different outcomes in quality of life, based on the breast-cancer-specific module of the European Organizaation for Research and Treatment of Cancer core questionnaire (EORTC QLQ-BR23) used postoperatively. A systematic literature search of PubMed and EMBASE was conducted. Observational clinical studies that compared the quality of life in different surgery groups and presented empirical findings were selected. Six studies met the inclusion criteria. Breast-conserving surgery has statistically significant better outcomes than mastectomy in three of the eight outcomes measured in the EORTC QLQ-BR23, namely body image (standard mean difference, SMD = 1.742, 95% CI 0.579-2.905, p = 0.003), future perspective (SMD = 0.606, 95% CI 0.075-1.138, p = 0.025) and systemic therapy side effects (SMD = -0.641, 95% CI 0.101-1.181, p = 0.020). Our study highlighted that breast-conserving surgery was preferred over mastectomy because breast-conserving surgery leads to better outcomes in body image, future perspectives and less systemic side effects.Entities:
Keywords: breast cancer; breast conserving; individualised patient profiles; mastectomy; meta-analysis; patient stratification; phenotyping; quality of life
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31817811 PMCID: PMC6950729 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph16244970
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Figure 1Process of study selection.
Cohort characteristics of included studies.
| Study | Year | Country | Total | Age, Mean ± SD (Range) | Mean Time from Surgery to Survey (Range) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sun [ | 2013 | Korea | 376 | 51.6 (28–70) | 4.08 (2–8.67) years |
| Acil [ | 2014 | Turkey | 100 | 51.83 ± 9.26 (34–76) | NA |
| Lagendijk (a) [ | 2018 | Netherlands | 385 | 54.93 ± 8.77 a | 5 a years |
| Lagendijk (b) [ | 2018 | Netherlands | 419 | 51.35 ± 12.65 a | 6.34 a years |
| Jendrian [ | 2017 | Germany | 107 | 67.33 ± 9.40 a (36.4–83.8) | 4.44 a (0.2–16) years |
| Tsai [ | 2017 | Taiwan | 544 | 52.8 ± 9.4 | NA |
SD, standard deviation; NA, not available. a Median, range and/or interquartile ranges were used as an estimate to calculate mean age and mean time since surgery [23,24,25].
Figure 2Forest plot showing the standardised mean difference of the body image score in patients who underwent mastectomy vs. BCS.
Figure 3Forest plot showing the standardised mean difference of the future perspective score in patients who underwent mastectomy vs. BCS.
Figure 4Forest plot showing the standardised mean difference of the systemic therapy side effects score in patients who underwent mastectomy vs. BCS.
Results for meta-regression analysis (body image).
| Predictor | No. of Studies Used | Univariate Coefficient | Z-Value | Estimated Tau2 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mean age | 6 | −0.128 | −1.14 | 0.253 | 2.38 |
| Mean time since surgery (years) | 4 | −2.23 | −1.49 | 0.136 | 6.57 |
Results for meta-regression analysis (systemic therapy side effects).
| Predictor | No. of Studies Used | Univariate Coefficient | Z-Value | Estimated Tau2 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mean age | 4 | 0.0348 | 0.760 | 0.448 | 0.334 |