| Literature DB >> 34229763 |
Shan Xu1, Xia Sun1, Ning Yang1, Aihui Yan2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Human-derived acellular dermal matrix (ADM) has been widely used as an effective alternative to autologous grafts in tympanoplasty. However, evidence of ADM as an alternative to autologous grafts in the repair of tympanic membrane (TM) perforation still lacks adequate empirical evidence.Entities:
Keywords: Acellular dermal matrix; Autologous grafts; Tympanoplasty
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34229763 PMCID: PMC8261972 DOI: 10.1186/s40463-021-00518-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Otolaryngol Head Neck Surg ISSN: 1916-0208
Fig. 1Results of literature review
Characteristics of the include studies
| Study | Design | Participants | Interventions | Follow-up | Outcomes | Primary Results | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Experimental | Control | ||||||
| Benecke 2001 [ | Retrospective cohort study | Patients underwent tympanoplasty | ADM (human-derived), | Autologous temporalis fascia, n = 20 | 6 months | Graft success rate; Audiometric tests(ABG) | ADM is a suitable material for TM grafting |
| Min 2018 [ | Retrospective cohort study | Patients with tympanic membrane perforation who underwent type I tympanoplasty | ADM (human-derived), | Autologous tragal perichondrium, | 3 months | Graft success rate; Operation time; Postoperative pain; Audiometric tests(ABG,BC) | Tympanoplasty using ADM can be achieved with similar postoperative results and less pain. |
| Vos 2005 [ | Retrospective cohort study | Patients underwent type I tympanoplasty without mastoidectomy or ossicular chain reconstruction | ADM (human-derived), | Autologous temporalis fascia, Autologous fascia plus cartilage reconstruction, | Not report | Graft success rate; Audiometric tests(ABG); Complications | ADM is an effective TM graft when used in type I tympanoplasty |
| Yang 2019 [ | Retrospective cohort study | Patients of tympanic membrane perforations who underwent tympanoplasty | ADM (human-derived), n = 27 | Autologous tragal perichondrium, | 6 months | Graft success rate; Operation time; Audiometric tests(ABG) | ADM can be recommended as an attractive alternative to cartilage grafts |
| Fu 2017 [ | Retrospective cohort study | Chronic suppurative otitis media patients underwent type I tympanoplasty | ADM (human-derived), | Autologous temporalis fascia, | 3 months | Graft success rate; Operation time; Postoperative pain Audiometric tests(ABG) | The effect of ADM for repairing tympanic membrane is similar to the temporalis fascia. |
| Lee 2018 [ | Prospective randomised controlled study | Patients who underwent type I tympanoplasty for tympanic membrane perforation | ADM (human-derived), n = 27 | Autologous tragal perichondrium, n = 33 | 6 months | Graft success rate; Operation time; Postoperative pain; Audiometric tests(ABG,AC,BC); Complications | ADM was shown to be an effective alternative to tragal perichondrium. |
| Li 2014 [ | Randomised controlled study | Middle ear cholesteatoma patients underwent tympanoplasty for tympanic membrane perforation | ADM (human-derived), | Autologous temporalis fascia, | 12 months | Graft success rate; Audiometric tests(ABG) | ADM was shown to be an effective alternative to the temporalis fascia |
| Raj 2011 [ | Prospective randomized unblinded controlled trial | chronic suppurative otitis media patients underwent type I tympanoplasty | ADM (human-derived), n = 20 | Autologous temporalis fascia, n = 20 | 3 months | Graft success rate; Operation time; Postoperative pain; Audiometric tests(ABG,BC) | ADM as graft material are comparable to temporalis fascia in terms of graft uptake and hearing improvement. |
| Liao 2017 [ | Randomised controlled study | Chronic suppurative otitis media patients undergoing tympanoplasty | ADM (human-derived), | Tragus cartilage-perichondrium, Mastoid process periosteum, Temporalis fascia, n = 28 | 24 months | Graft success rate; Operation time; Audiometric tests(ABG) | ADM is suitable for small and medium-sized perforation. |
TM Tympanic membrane; ADM Acellular dermal matrix; AC Air conduction BC Bone conduction ABG Air-bone gap
Characteristics of participants
| Study | Country | n | Average age | Causes of TM perforation | Mean perforation size% | ADM derivation | Autologous grafts | Type of surgery | Anesthesia |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Benecke 2001 [ | USA | 40 | NR | NR | NR | human | Temporalis fascia | Type 1 tympanoplasty | NR |
| Min 2018 [ | Korea | 53 | 53.2 | NR | 22.90% | human | Tragal perichondrium | Type 1 tympanoplasty | Local anesthesia |
| Vos 2005 [ | USA | 108 | 20 | NR | 45% | human | Multiple grafts | Type 1 tympanoplasty | General anesthesia |
| Yang 2019 [ | China | 61 | 29.2 | NR | NR | human | Tragal perichondrium | Type 1 tympanoplasty | General anesthesia |
| Fu 2017 [ | China | 60 | 31.5 | Chronic suppurative otitis media | NR | human | Temporalis fascia | Type 1 tympanoplasty | Local anesthesia |
| Lee 2018 [ | Korea | 60 | 53.3 | NR | NR | human | Tragal perichondrium | Type 1 tympanoplasty | Local anesthesia |
| Li 2014 [ | China | 52 | 53 | Middle ear cholesteatoma | NR | human | Temporalis fascia | Type 1 tympanoplasty | General anesthesia |
| Raj 2011 [ | India | 40 | NR | Chronic suppurative otitis media | NR | human | Temporalis fascia | Type 1 tympanoplasty | Local anesthesia |
| Liao 2017 [ | China | 136 | 41 | Chronic suppurative otitis media | NR | human | Multiple grafts | Type 1 tympanoplasty | NR |
TM Tympanic membrane; ADM Acellular dermal matrix; NR Not report
Risk of bias assessment of retrospective cohort studies
| stduy | Selection | Comparability | Outcome | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Item 1 | Item 2 | Item 3 | Item 4 | Item 5 | Item 6 | Item 7 | Item 8 | |
| Benecke 2001 [ | ☆ | ☆ | ☆ | ☆ | ☆ | ☆ | ||
| Min 2018 [ | ☆ | ☆ | ☆ | ☆ | ☆☆ | ☆ | ☆ | ☆ |
| Vos 2005 [ | ☆ | ☆ | ☆ | ☆ | ☆☆ | ☆ | ||
| Yang 2019 [ | ☆ | ☆ | ☆ | ☆ | ☆☆ | ☆ | ☆ | ☆ |
| Fu 2017 [ | ☆ | ☆ | ☆ | ☆ | ☆ | ☆ | ☆ | ☆ |
Item 1: Representativeness of the exposed cohort
Item 2: Selection of the non - exposed cohort
Item 3: Ascertainment of exposure
Item 4: Demonstration that outcome of interest was not present at start of study
Item 5: Comparability of cohorts on the basis of the design or analysis
Item 6: Assessment of outcome
Item 7: Was follow-up long enough for outcomes to occur
Item 8: Adequacy of follow up of cohorts
Risk of bias assessment of randomised controlled studies
| stduy | Selection bias | Performance bias | Detection bias | Attrition bias | Reporting bias | Other bias | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Item 1 | Item 2 | Item 3 | Item 4 | Item 5 | Item 6 | Item 7 | |
| Lee 2018 [ | Low risk | Unclear risk | Unclear risk | Unclear risk | Low risk | Unclear risk | Unclear risk |
| Li 2014 [ | Unclear risk | Unclear risk | Unclear risk | Unclear risk | Low risk | Unclear risk | Unclear risk |
| Raj 2011 [ | Unclear risk | Unclear risk | High risk | High risk | Low risk | Unclear risk | Unclear risk |
| Liao 2017 [ | Unclear risk | Unclear risk | Unclear risk | Unclear risk | Low risk | Unclear risk | Unclear risk |
Item 1: Random sequence generation;
Item 2: Allocation concealment;
Item 3: Blinding of participants and personnel;
Item 4: Blinding of outcome assessment;
Item 5: Incomplete outcome data;
Item 6: Selective reporting;
Item 7: Bias due to problems not covered by [1] to [6] above
Fig. 2Galbraith plots of outcomes. Heterogeneity assessment. Galbraith plots of pooled outcomes, study plots outside the 95% confidence interval indicate heterogeneity. (a) Graft success rate; (b) Operation time; (c) Immediate postoperative pain, study Raj 2011included; (d) Immediate postoperative pain, study Raj 2011excluded; (e) Bone conduction; (f) Air-bone gap; (g) Air-bone gap reduction. The outcomes of pain one day after surgery and air conduction are unavailable due to insufficient number of studies
Heterogeneity and publication bias assessment
| Outcomes | I2 | Potential source of heterogeneity | Egger’s test |
|---|---|---|---|
| Graft success rate | 0% | none | |
| Surgery time | 90% | Fu 2017 [ | |
| Postoperative pain (immediately postsurgery) | 91% | Raj 2011 [ | |
| Postoperative pain (1 day postsurgery) | Not applicable | Not applicable | Not applicable |
| Hearing results (average AC) | Not applicable | Not applicable | Not applicable |
| Hearing results (average BC) | 0% | none | Not applicable |
| Hearing results (average ABG) | 38% | none | |
| Hearing results (ABG reduction) | 0% | none | Not applicable |
| Complications | Not applicable | Not applicable | Not applicable |
Not applicable: the assessment is not possible because of the insufficient number of included studies
Fig. 3Funnel plots of outcomes. Publication bias assessment. Funnel plots of outcomes, Egger’s linear regression test was used to evaluate asymmetry, and P < 0.05 was set as the level of significance. (a) Graft success rate, p = 0.288; (b) Operation time, p = 0.016; (c) Immediate postoperative pain, p = 0.178; (d) Pain one day after surgery, insufficient observations for Egger’s test; (e) Air conduction, insufficient observations for Egger’s test; (f) Bone conduction, insufficient observations for Egger’s test; (g) Air-bone gap, p = 0.522; (h) Air-bone gap reduction, insufficient observations for egger’s test
Fig. 4Forest plot of graft success rate
Fig. 5Forest plot of operation time
Fig. 6Forest plot of postoperative pain
Fig. 7Forest plot of hearing results
Fig. 8Forest plot of complications