Dillon Michael P, Quigley Matthew, Fatone Stefania
Discipline of Prosthetics and Orthotics, College of Science, Health and Engineering, La Trobe University, Bundoora, Victoria, 3086, Australia.
Northwestern University Prosthetics-Orthotics Centre, Feinberg School of Medicine, Northwestern University, 680 N Lake Shore Drive, Suite 1100, Chicago, IL, 60611, USA.
Syst Rev. 2017 Mar 14;6(1):54. doi: 10.1186/s13643-017-0433-7.
Dysvascular partial foot amputation (PFA) is a common sequel to advanced peripheral vascular disease. Helping inform difficult discussions between patients and practitioners about the level of PFA, or the decision to have a transtibial amputation (TTA) as an alternative, requires an understanding of the current research evidence on a wide range of topics including wound healing, reamputation, quality of life, mobility, functional ability, participation, pain and psychosocial outcomes, and mortality. The aim of this review was to describe a comprehensive range of outcomes of dysvascular PFA and compare these between levels of PFA and TTA.
The review protocol was registered in PROSPERO (CRD42015029186). A systematic search of the literature was conducted using MEDLINE, EMBASE, psychINFO, AMED, CINAHL, ProQuest Nursing and Allied Health, and Web of Science. These databases were searched using MeSH terms and keywords relating to different amputation levels and outcomes of interest. Peer reviewed studies of original research-irrespective of the study design-were included if published in English between 1 January 2000, and 31 December 2015, and included discrete cohort(s) with dysvascular PFA or PFA and TTA. Outcomes of interest were rate of wound healing and complications, rate of ipsilateral reamputation, quality of life, functional ability, mobility, pain (i.e., residual limb or phantom pain), psychosocial outcomes (i.e., depression, anxiety, body image and self-esteem), participation, and mortality rate. Included studies were independently appraised by two reviewers. The McMaster Critical Review Forms were used to assess methodological quality and identify sources of bias. Data were extracted based on the Cochrane Consumers and Communication Review Group's data extraction template by a primary reviewer and checked for accuracy and clarity by a second reviewer. Findings are reported as narrative summaries given the heterogeneity of the literature, except for mortality and ipsilateral reamputation where data allowed for proportional meta-analyses.
Twenty-nine unique articles were included in the review, acknowledging that some studies reported multiple outcomes. Eighteen studies reported all-cause proportionate mortality. A smaller number of studies reported outcomes related to functional ability (two), mobility (four), quality of life (three), ipsilateral reamputation (six) as well as wound healing and complications (four). No studies related to pain, participation or psychosocial outcomes met the inclusion criteria. Subjects were typically older and male and had diabetes among other comorbidities. More detailed information about the cohorts such as race or sociodemographic factors were reported in an ad hoc manner. Common sources of bias included contamination, co-intervention, or lack of operational definition for some outcomes (e.g., wound healing) as illustrative examples.
Aside from mortality, there was limited evidence regarding outcomes of dysvascular PFA, particularly how outcomes differ between levels of PFA and TTA. Acknowledging that there is considerable uncertainty given the small body of literature on many topics where the risk of bias is high, the available evidence suggests that a large proportion of people with PFA experience delayed wound healing and ipsilateral reamputation. People with TTA have increased risk of mortality compared to those with PFA, which may reflect that those considered suitable candidates for TTA have more advanced systemic disease that also increases the risk of dying. Mobility and quality of life may be similar in people with PFA and TTA.
CRD42015029186.
血管性足部部分截肢(PFA)是晚期外周血管疾病的常见后遗症。为帮助患者和医生就PFA的截肢水平或选择经胫骨截肢(TTA)作为替代方案进行艰难的讨论提供信息,需要了解当前关于广泛主题的研究证据,包括伤口愈合、再次截肢、生活质量、活动能力、功能能力、参与度、疼痛及心理社会结局和死亡率。本综述的目的是描述血管性PFA的一系列综合结局,并比较PFA不同水平与TTA之间的这些结局。
该综述方案已在国际前瞻性系统评价注册库(PROSPERO,注册号:CRD42015029186)登记。使用MEDLINE、EMBASE、心理学文摘数据库(psychINFO)、联合和补充医学数据库(AMED)、护理学与健康领域数据库(CINAHL)、ProQuest护理学及相关健康学科数据库以及科学引文索引数据库(Web of Science)对文献进行系统检索。使用与不同截肢水平和感兴趣结局相关的医学主题词(MeSH)和关键词对这些数据库进行检索。纳入2000年1月1日至2015年12月31日期间以英文发表的、涉及血管性PFA或PFA与TTA的离散队列的、经同行评审的原始研究(不论研究设计)。感兴趣的结局包括伤口愈合率和并发症、同侧再次截肢率、生活质量、功能能力、活动能力、疼痛(即残肢痛或幻肢痛)、心理社会结局(即抑郁、焦虑、身体意象和自尊)、参与度和死亡率。纳入的研究由两名评审员独立评估。使用麦克马斯特批判性评价表评估方法学质量并识别偏倚来源。由一名主要评审员根据Cochrane消费者与传播评价小组的数据提取模板提取数据,并由另一名评审员检查数据的准确性和清晰度。鉴于文献的异质性,除死亡率和同侧再次截肢外(这些数据允许进行成比例的Meta分析),研究结果以叙述性总结形式报告。
本综述纳入了29篇独特的文章,需说明的是,一些研究报告了多个结局。18项研究报告了全因成比例死亡率。较少数量的研究报告了与功能能力(2项)、活动能力(4项)、生活质量(3项)、同侧再次截肢(6项)以及伤口愈合和并发症(4项)相关的结局。没有与疼痛、参与度或心理社会结局相关的研究符合纳入标准。受试者通常年龄较大且为男性,除其他合并症外还患有糖尿病。关于队列的更详细信息,如种族或社会人口统计学因素,是以临时方式报告的。常见的偏倚来源包括污染、联合干预或某些结局(如伤口愈合)缺乏操作定义等示例。
除死亡率外,关于血管性PFA结局的证据有限,尤其是PFA不同水平与TTA之间结局的差异。鉴于许多主题的文献量较少且偏倚风险较高,存在相当大的不确定性,现有证据表明,很大一部分PFA患者经历伤口愈合延迟和同侧再次截肢。与PFA患者相比,TTA患者的死亡风险增加,这可能反映出那些被认为适合TTA的患者患有更严重的全身性疾病,这也增加了死亡风险。PFA患者和TTA患者的活动能力和生活质量可能相似。
CRD42015029186。