| Literature DB >> 32852897 |
O Waddell1, A McCombie1, F Frizelle1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Spinal cord injury (SCI) has a significant impact on the quality of life (QoL) of affected patients. The aim of this review was to determine whether colostomy formation improves QoL in patients with SCI.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32852897 PMCID: PMC7709367 DOI: 10.1002/bjs5.50339
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BJS Open ISSN: 2474-9842
Fig. 1PRISMA diagram for the review
Quality of life
| Reference | No. of patients | Quality of life | Measure used |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cooper | 26 | QoL was improved in 76 per cent, unchanged in 24 per cent | Likert scale |
| Munck | 23 | QoL was improved in 50 per cent, unchanged in 40 per cent | Questionnaire |
| Luther | 74 stoma, 296 controls | No difference in QoL | Questionnaire |
| Branagan | 32 | QoL was improved: 78 per cent ‘much better’ and 15 per cent ‘better’ | Likert scale |
| Safadi | 45 | QoL was improved; QoL score improved from 60 to 80. This index was based on five general domains of QoL: physical health, psychosocial adjustment, body image, self‐efficacy and recreation/leisure | QoL index |
| De La Fuente | 12 | QoL was improved: 58 per cent ‘much better’ and 25 per cent ‘better’ | Likert scale |
| Rosito | 27 | QoL was improved. QoL index significantly improved in the stoma group. Of five QoL domains assessed, there was a statistically significant increase in four: physical health, self‐efficacy, psychosocial status and recreation/leisure. Body image was unaffected | QoL index |
| Randell | 52 | No difference in QoL. Areas assessed included systemic symptoms, emotional function, social function, work function and bowel function | Questionnaire |
| Kelly | 14 | QoL was improved: 79 per cent ‘much better’ and 7 per cent ‘better’ | Likert scale |
| Craven and Etchells | 17 | QoL was improved. Exact figures not published, but authors commented that QoL was improved and patients consistently commented that they had more independence after stoma formation | Questionnaire |
| Stone | 20 | QoL was improved: 64 per cent ‘much better’, 27 per cent ‘better’ and 9 per cent unchanged | Likert scale |
QoL, quality of life.
Time spent on bowel care
| Reference | No. of patients | Time spent on bowel care |
|---|---|---|
| Cooper | 26 | Significantly reduced. Forty per cent spent over 1 h before stoma formation; this reduced to 0 per cent after stoma formation, with 88 per cent now taking 15 min or less |
| Bølling Hansen | 18 | Significantly reduced. Fifty per cent spent over 1 h before stoma formation; this reduced to 0 per cent after stoma formation, with over 70 per cent taking 15 min or less |
| Coggrave | 92 | Significantly reduced. Forty‐five per cent spent over 1 h before stoma formation; this reduced to 9 per cent, with 60 per cent now spending 15 min or less |
| Munck | 23 | Significantly reduced from 51 to 13 min per day |
| Branagan | 32 | Significantly reduced from 88 to 16 min per day |
| Safadi | 45 | Significantly reduced. In patients with a right‐sided colostomy the average time spent per day decreased from 102 to 11 min, for those with a left‐sided colostomy from 123 to 18 min, and for ileostomy from 73 to 13 min |
| De La Fuente | 12 | Significantly reduced from 70 to 21 min per day |
| Rosito | 27 | Significantly reduced from 117 to 13 min per day |
| Kelly | 14 | Significantly reduced from 75 to 12 min per day |
| Craven and Etchells | 17 | All patients commented that they spent less time on bowel care. Exact figures not given |
| Saltzstein and Romano | 16 | Significantly reduced from 95 to 34 min per day |
| Stone | 20 | Significantly reduced from 99 to 18 min per day |
| Frisbie | 20 | Significantly reduced, with the median time spent on bowel care reduced from 77 to 9 min per day |
Satisfaction with stoma
| Reference | No. of patients | Patient satisfaction |
|---|---|---|
| Cooper | 26 | Satisfaction was very high: 72 per cent scored at least 8 on a 10‐point Likert scale asking to rate how satisfied they were with their stoma; 96 per cent would recommend to a friend |
| Bølling Hansen | 18 | Only one patient wanted their stoma to be reversed; 66 per cent wished they had had it sooner |
| Coggrave | 92 | Over 82 per cent said they would have stoma surgery again, with 84 per cent saying they would recommend it to a friend; 16 per cent wanted stoma reversal |
| Branagan | 32 | All patients felt bowel care was easier; 78 per cent wished it had been done sooner |
| Safadi | 45 | Some 83–100 per cent of patients were satisfied with their stoma (depending on stoma location); 63–77 per cent wished it had been done sooner; 12 per cent or less would want their stoma reversed |
| De La Fuente | 12 | All patients had stomas created for management of pressure areas and not for bowel control; despite this, 75 per cent did not want their stoma reversed |
| Rosito | 27 | All patients (100 per cent) reported they were ‘satisfied’ with their stoma and 59 per cent were ‘very satisfied’; 70 per cent wished they had had it done sooner. All patients stated that the stoma improved independence |
| Kelly | 14 | All patients felt bowel care was easier, with 92 per cent wishing it had been done sooner. None wanted their stoma reversed, and 83 per cent said their independence had increased as a result of the stoma |
| Craven and Etchells | 17 | Only one patient wanted their stoma closed, and this had been done to manage a colovesical fistula that had healed |
| Saltzstein and Romano | 16 | Some 93 per cent reported satisfaction with their stoma and would recommend it to other patients. Only one patient wanted reversal |
| Stone | 20 | No patients in this study wanted their stoma reversed. Satisfaction was highest in group that had the stoma for gastrointestinal problems |
| Frisbie | 20 | No patient regretted stoma formation; all patients reported being happier with their bowel care |