| Literature DB >> 34983648 |
Theresa Junker1,2, Louise Duus3,4, Benjamin S B Rasmussen3,4, Nessn Azawi5,6, Lars Lund4,7, Ole Graumann3,4, Birgitte Nørgaard8.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Despite the fact that nephron-sparing treatment is considered preferable from a surgical perspective patients' quality of life (QoL) following different types of nephron-sparing treatments remains unclear.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 34983648 PMCID: PMC8725354 DOI: 10.1186/s13643-021-01868-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Syst Rev ISSN: 2046-4053
PIO—search terms in MEDLINE
| Population | Intervention | Outcome |
|---|---|---|
Kidney or renal adj3 cancer* or carcinoma* or neoplasm* or tumo?r* Renal cell carcinoma exp Carcinoma, Renal Cell Kidney Neoplasm exp Kidney Neoplasms Localised renal cell carcinoma Localized renal cell carcinoma Organ sparing treatment exp Organ Sparing Treatments | Nephron sparing treatment Nephron sparing surgery Renal sparing treatment Renal sparing surgery Kidney sparing treatment Kidney sparing surgery Partial nephrectomy Minimal* invasive adj3 procedure Minimal* invasive adj3 treatment Minimal* invasive adj3 surgery Robot* adj3 partial nephrectomy exp Ablation Techniques Thermal ablation exp Cryosurgery Cryoablation Cryo-surgery Cryo-therapy Percutaneous adj3 cryoablation Laparoscopic cryoablation Microwave ablation Radiofrequency ablation Radiofrequency Ablation RFA | Quality of life exp "Quality of Life" exp "Surveys and Questionnaires" QoL Health related quality of life Health-related quality of life HRQoL HR-QoL Quality of life questionnaire* SF-36 Short form 36 SF-12 Short form 12 European Organisation for Research and Treatment of Cancer EORTC EORTC QLQ c-30 EQ-5D EQ5D exp Health Status EuroQoL exp Patient Reported Outcome Measures Patient Reported Outcome Measures PRO Quality of wellbeing Quality of well-being Cancer Rehabilitation Evaluation System-Short form CARES-SF Convalescence and recovery CARE Functional assessment of cancer therapy-general Fact-g Functional assessment of cancer therapy-Kidney Symptom Index FKSI Renal cell carcinoma symptom index RCC-SI |
Fig. 1PRISMA flow diagram
Summary of study characteristics, key findings, and conclusions of included studies
| Study | Aim | Design, treatment, and time of measurement | Population | QoL instrument | Complications | Results | Conclusions |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Clark et al. [ 2001 USA | To analyze the QoL and psychological adjustment after surgical therapy for localized renal cell carcinoma | Retrospective cross-sectional design Treatment period 1990–1997 Elective PN ( Mandatory PN ( Response rate 75% | 74.3% male, 25.7% female mean age 64 years Time since treatment: mean 39 ± 23 months | SF-36, IES, additional questionnaire Distributed via mail. | Self-reported Mean 39 ± 23 months after treatment | The amount of self-reported renal parenchyma remaining was a predictor of several QoL domains. 16.8% reported complicated by problems | QoL is better for patients with more renal parenchyma remaining after surgery for localized renal cell carcinoma. |
Shinohara et al. [ 2001 Japan | To evaluate the impact of PN on postoperative QoL in patients with localized RCC, compared with RN | Retrospective cross-sectional design Treatment period 1986–1996 PN ( Response rate 80% | 86.7% male, 13.3% female Mean age 61 years Time since treatment: mean 47 ± 40 months | EORTC QLQ-C30 Distributed by mail. | No instrument presented (narrative description) No information of time of assessment. | PN reported higher scores on several QoL domains. 20% complications | Selected patients with localized, small, unilateral RCC, and a normal contralateral kidney will benefit from PN |
Ficarra et al. [ 2002 Italy | To compare the psychological, social well-being and the general state of health in patients who underwent either NSS or RN for T1N0M0 RCC | Retrospective cross-sectional design Treatment period 1985–1999 Elective PN ( Response rate not shown | 71.4% male, 28.6% female Mean age 58 Time since treatment: mean 62.25 months | G.H.Q., H.A.D.S and S.P.Q Self-administrated during follow-up (physician present). | N.R. | 1.8% documented a low level of anxiety 2.3% mild depression 7% impaired general health status 18% documented social problems | Radical surgery seems to eventually cause more negative impact on the psychological well-being than NSS. |
Onishi et al. [ 2007 Japan | To assess the changes in HRQoL during a follow-up period in patients treated with percutaneous RFA or LRN for small RCC | Prospective cohort study Treatment period 2004–2006 Percutaneous RFA ( Response rate not shown | 75% male, 25% female Mean age 65.9 Time since treatment: 1 week, 4 weeks, 12 weeks, and 24 weeks | SF-36 Distribution type not reported | No instrument presented (narrative description) No information of time of assessment. | No significant difference but a gradual improvement in SF-36 postoperatively. No major surgical or postoperative complications. | If you look exclusively at HRQoL, RFA could be an alternative treatment for selected patients with small RCC. |
Wang et al. [ 2019 China | To evaluate the technical feasibility and outcomes of 2-μm continuous thulium LLPN and conventional LPN in the treatment of patients with SRMs. | Retrospective cross-sectional design Treatment period 2013–2017 LPN ( Response rate 76.3% | LPN: 77.8% male, 22.2% female LLPN: 66.7% male, 33.3% female LPN: mean age 61.2 years LLPN: mean age 63.5 years Time since treatment: 12 months | SF-36 Distribution type not reported | Clavien-Dindo classification system. No information of time of assessment. | No significant differences found in any SF-36 domains between LPN and LLPN. LPN = One intraoperative complication. Postoperative complications Clavien-Dindo grade 1–2: LPN ( LLPN ( | LPN and LLPN has acceptable and similar results regarding complications and HRQoL outcome. |
Sandbergen et al. [ 2020 Netherlands | Longitudinal assessment of HRQoL differences in patients with localized renal masses according to treatment strategy. | Prospective cohort study Treatment period 2011–2014 PCA ( LCA ( Response rate 74.2% | 66.7% male, 33.3% female Mean age 70.1 years Time since treatment: 1, 3, and 12 months | SF-36 and FKSI-15 Distributed by mail | Clavien-Dindo classification. Complications within 90 days | Significant difference in social functioning and physical role limitations after one month favoring CA over PN Patients recovered to baseline values on all SF-36 domains 12 months after treatment. 12.5% ( Clavien-Dindo grade 1 ( Clavien-Dindo grade 2 ( | In the short-term HRQoL outcomes favor a minimally invasive approach, but at mid-term these advantages are no longer apparent. |
Breau et al. [ 2021 Canada | To assess the effect of renal hypothermia during OPN on postoperative kidney function. Secondary outcome: Quality of life changes | Prospective, RCT Randomized 1:1 Treatment period 2012–2016 OPN Hypothermia ( OPN Controls ( Response rate 83.6% | OPN hypothermia: 59% male, 41% female Mean age 58 years OPN controls: 64% male, 36% female Mean age 63 years Time since treatment: 12 months | EQ-5D-5L Distribution type not reported | Adverse effects grouped under labels (ileus, wound infections etc.) Up to 1-year post-operative. | Hypothermia: Mean global health score of 79.3 (baseline) to 82.0 (at 1-year) Controls: Mean global health score of 79.6 (baseline) to 81.2 (at 1-year) No significant change or difference between groups on levels of global health. 10% versus 17% complications (hypothermia versus controls) | OPN did not impact patient reported QoL 12 months after surgery. Nor did renal hypothermia during OPN. |
Watanabe et al. [ 2021 Japan | To investigate the changes in health-related quality of life outcomes in patients with SRM who underwent RAPN | Prospective cohort study Treatment period 2016–2018 RAPN Response rate 100% | 64% male, 36% female Mean age 62.6 years Time since treatment: 3, 6 and 12 months | SF-8 Distribution type not reported | Clavien-Dindo classification system. No information of time of assessment. | No individual QoL score were significantly inferior to baseline. BP and RE were significant improved after 3 and 6 months. MH and MCS scores significant improved after 3, 6, and 12 months. 14% complications. Clavien-Dindo grade 1 ( Clavien-Dindo grade 2 ( Clavien-Dindo grade 3 ( Clavien-Dindo grade 4 ( | RAPN shows favorable HRQoL outcomes up to 12 months after surgery. Particularly increasing mental health among patients under the age of 65 years. |
Quality assessment using a modified version of the CASP checklist for cohort studies [11] and CASP Randomized Controlled Trials Checklist [12]
| Study (observational) | Clearly focused question | Recruited subjects in an acceptable way | Exposure accurately measured to minimize bias | Outcome accurately measured to minimize bias | Identified all important confounding factors | Account of the confounding factors in design and/or analysis? | Was the follow up of subjects complete enough? | Was the follow up of subjects long enough? | Do you believe the results? | Can the results be applied to the local population? | Do the results fit with other available evidence? | Implications of this study for practice? |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Clark et al. [ | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | n/a | n/a | Yes | Can’t tell | Yes | Can’t tell |
| Shinohara et al. [ | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | n/a | n/a | Yes | Can’t tell | Yes | Can’t tell |
| Ficarra et al. [ | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | n/a | n/a | Yes | Can’t tell | Yes | Can’t tell |
| Onishi et al. [ | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | Can’t tell | Yes | Yes | Can’t tell | Yes | Can’t tell |
| Wang et al. [ | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | n/a | n/a | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Sandbergen et al. [ | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Watanabe et al. [ | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Can’t tell | Yes | Yes | Yes | Can’t tell | Yes | Yes |
| Study (RCT) | Clearly focused question | Randomization to intervention | All patients entering study accounted for | A: Patients “blinded” B: Investigators “blinded” C: “People assessing blinded” | Study groups similar at baseline | Did intervention and control group receive same level of care? | Effects of intervention reported comprehensively | Precision of estimate of treatment effect reported | Benefits of intervention outweigh the harms and costs | Can the results be applied to the local population? | Would the intervention provide greater value to the patients in your care that any of the existing interventions? | |
| Breau et al. [ | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |