Jeffery Mark, Hickey Brigid E, Hider Phil N, See Adrienne M
Canterbury Regional Cancer and Haematology Service, Christchurch Hospital, Private Bag 4710, Christchurch, New Zealand, 8140.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2016 Nov 24;11(11):CD002200. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD002200.pub3.
It is common clinical practice to follow patients with colorectal cancer (CRC) for several years following their curative surgery or adjuvant therapy, or both. Despite this widespread practice, there is considerable controversy about how often patients should be seen, what tests should be performed, and whether these varying strategies have any significant impact on patient outcomes. This is the second update of a Cochrane Review first published in 2002 and first updated in 2007.
To assess the effects of intensive follow-up for patients with non-metastatic colorectal cancer treated with curative intent.
For this update, we searched CENTRAL (2016, Issue 3), MEDLINE (1950 to May 20th, 2016), Embase (1974 to May 20th, 2016), CINAHL (1981 to May 20th, 2016), and Science Citation Index (1900 to May 20th, 2016). We also searched reference lists of articles, and handsearched the Proceedings of the American Society for Radiation Oncology (2011 to 2014). In addition, we searched the following trials registries (May 20th, 2016): ClinicalTrials.gov and the World Health Organization International Clinical Trials Registry Platform. We further contacted study authors. No language or publication restrictions were applied to the search strategies.
We included only randomised controlled trials comparing different follow-up strategies for participants with non-metastatic CRC treated with curative intent.
Two authors independently determined trial eligibility, performed data extraction, and assessed methodological quality.
We studied 5403 participants enrolled in 15 studies. (We included two new studies in this second update.) Although the studies varied in setting (general practitioner (GP)-led, nurse-led, or surgeon-led) and "intensity" of follow-up, there was very little inconsistency in the results.Overall survival: we found no evidence of a statistical effect with intensive follow-up (hazard ratio (HR) 0.90, 95% confidence interval (CI) 0.78 to 1.02; I² = 4%; P = 0.41; high-quality evidence). There were 1098 deaths among 4786 participants enrolled in 12 studies.Colorectal cancer-specific survival: this did not differ with intensive follow-up (HR 0.93, 95% CI 0.78 to 1.12; I² = 0%; P = 0.45; moderate-quality evidence). There were 432 colorectal cancer deaths among 3769 participants enrolled in seven studies.Relapse-free survival: we found no statistical evidence of effect with intensive follow-up (HR 1.03, 95% CI 0.90 to 1.18; I² = 5%; P = 0.39; moderate-quality evidence). There were 1416 relapses among 5253 participants enrolled in 14 studies.Salvage surgery with curative intent: this was more frequent with intensive follow-up (risk ratio (RR) 1.98, 95% CI 1.53 to 2.56; I² = 31%; P = 0.14; high-quality evidence). There were 457 episodes of salvage surgery in 5157 participants enrolled in 13 studies.Interval (symptomatic) recurrences: these were less frequent with intensive follow-up (RR 0.59, 95% CI 0.41 to 0.86; I² = 66%; P = 0.007; moderate-quality evidence). Three hundred and seventy-six interval recurrences were reported in 3933 participants enrolled in seven studies.Intensive follow-up did not appear to affect quality of life, anxiety, nor depression (reported in three studies).Harms from colonoscopies did not differ with intensive follow-up (RR 2.08, 95% CI 0.11 to 40.17; moderate-quality evidence). In two studies, there were seven colonoscopic complications in 2112 colonoscopies.
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: The results of our review suggest that there is no overall survival benefit for intensifying the follow-up of patients after curative surgery for colorectal cancer. Although more participants were treated with salvage surgery with curative intent in the intensive follow-up group, this was not associated with improved survival. Harms related to intensive follow-up and salvage therapy were not well reported.
对接受根治性手术或辅助治疗或两者皆有的结直肠癌(CRC)患者进行数年随访是常见的临床实践。尽管这种做法很普遍,但关于患者应多久接受一次检查、应进行哪些检查以及这些不同策略是否对患者预后有任何重大影响仍存在相当大的争议。这是Cochrane系统评价的第二次更新,该评价首次发表于2002年,首次更新于2007年。
评估对接受根治性治疗的非转移性结直肠癌患者进行强化随访的效果。
本次更新中,我们检索了Cochrane中心对照试验注册库(CENTRAL,2016年第3期)、医学期刊数据库(MEDLINE,1950年至2016年5月20日)、荷兰医学文摘数据库(Embase,1974年至2016年5月20日)、护理学与健康领域数据库(CINAHL,1981年至2016年5月20日)以及科学引文索引(Science Citation Index,1900年至2016年5月20日)。我们还检索了文章的参考文献列表,并手工检索了美国放射肿瘤学会会议论文集(2011年至2014年)。此外,我们检索了以下试验注册库(2016年5月20日):ClinicalTrials.gov和世界卫生组织国际临床试验注册平台。我们还进一步联系了研究作者。检索策略未设语言或发表限制。
我们仅纳入了比较对接受根治性治疗的非转移性CRC患者采用不同随访策略的随机对照试验。
两位作者独立确定试验的纳入标准,进行数据提取,并评估方法学质量。
我们研究了15项研究中的5403名参与者。(本次第二次更新纳入了两项新研究。)尽管这些研究在随访的背景(由全科医生(GP)主导、护士主导或外科医生主导)和“强度”方面存在差异,但结果的不一致性很小。
我们未发现强化随访有统计学效应的证据(风险比(HR)0.90,95%置信区间(CI)0.78至1.02;I² = 4%;P = 0.41;高质量证据)。12项研究中的4786名参与者中有1098人死亡。
强化随访时无差异(HR 0.93,95% CI 0.78至1.12;I² = 0%;P = 0.45;中等质量证据)。7项研究中的3769名参与者中有432人死于结直肠癌。
我们未发现强化随访有统计学效应的证据(HR 1.03,95% CI 0.90至1.18;I² = 5%;P = 0.39;中等质量证据)。14项研究中的5253名参与者中有1416人复发。
强化随访时更频繁(风险比(RR)1.98,95% CI 1.53至2.56;I² = 31%;P = 0.14;高质量证据)。13项研究中的5157名参与者中有457例进行了挽救性手术。
间期(有症状)复发:强化随访时较少见(RR 0.59,95% CI 0.41至0.86;I² = 66%;P = 0.007;中等质量证据)。7项研究中的3933名参与者报告了376例间期复发。
强化随访似乎未影响生活质量、焦虑或抑郁(三项研究中有报告)。
结肠镜检查的危害在强化随访时无差异(RR 2.08,95% CI 0.11至40.17;中等质量证据)。两项研究中,2112次结肠镜检查中有7例并发症。
我们的系统评价结果表明,结直肠癌根治性手术后强化随访对总生存期无益处。尽管强化随访组中更多参与者接受了根治性挽救性手术,但这与生存率的改善无关。与强化随访和挽救性治疗相关的危害报告不足。