Surgical Epidemiology Unit, Department of Surgery and Cancer, Imperial College London, St. Mary's Hospital, London, UK.
Department of Surgical Research and Innovation, The Royal College of Surgeons of England, London, UK.
Ann Surg Oncol. 2018 Jan;25(1):221-230. doi: 10.1245/s10434-017-6210-y. Epub 2017 Nov 6.
Randomized controlled trials (RCTs) inform clinical practice and have provided the evidence base for introducing minimally invasive surgery (MIS) in surgical oncology. Crossover (unplanned intraoperative conversion of MIS to open surgery) may affect clinical outcomes and the effect size generated from RCTs with homogenization of randomized groups.
Our aims were to identify modifiable factors associated with crossover and assess the impact of crossover on clinical endpoints.
A systematic review was performed to identify all RCTs comparing MIS with open surgery for gastrointestinal cancer (1990-2017). Meta-regression analysis was performed to analyze factors associated with crossover and the influence of crossover on endpoints, including 30-day mortality, anastomotic leak rate, and early complications.
Forty RCTs were included, reporting on 11,625 patients from 320 centers. Crossover was shown to affect one in eight patients (mean 12.6%, range 0-45%) and increased with American Society of Anesthesiologists score (β = + 0.895; p = 0.050). Pretrial surgeon volume (β = - 2.344; p = 0.037), composite RCT quality score (β = - 7.594; p = 0.014), and site of tumor (β = - 12.031; p = 0.021, favoring lower over upper gastrointestinal tumors) showed an inverse relationship with crossover. Importantly, multivariate weighted linear regression revealed a statistically significant positive correlation between crossover and 30-day mortality (β = + 0.125; p = 0.033), anastomotic leak rate (β = + 0.550; p = 0.004), and early complications (β = + 1.255; p = 0.001), based on intention-to-treat analysis.
Crossover in trials was associated with an increase in 30-day mortality, anastomotic leak rate, and early complications within the MIS group based on intention-to-treat analysis, although our analysis did not assess causation. Credentialing surgeons by procedural volume and excluding high comorbidity patients from initial trials are important in minimizing crossover and optimizing RCT validity.
随机对照试验(RCT)为临床实践提供了信息,并为微创外科(MIS)在肿瘤外科中的应用提供了证据基础。交叉(计划外术中将 MIS 转换为开放手术)可能会影响临床结果,并影响 RCT 产生的效应量,因为随机分组被同质化了。
我们的目的是确定与交叉相关的可改变因素,并评估交叉对临床终点的影响。
进行了一项系统综述,以确定所有比较胃肠道癌症的 MIS 与开放手术的 RCT(1990-2017 年)。进行了荟萃回归分析,以分析与交叉相关的因素,以及交叉对 30 天死亡率、吻合口漏率和早期并发症等终点的影响。
共纳入 40 项 RCT,来自 320 个中心的 11625 名患者入组。结果显示,有 1/8 的患者(平均 12.6%,范围 0-45%)发生了交叉,并且交叉的发生率随着美国麻醉医师协会评分的增加而增加(β=+0.895;p=0.050)。术前手术医师的手术量(β=-2.344;p=0.037)、综合 RCT 质量评分(β=-7.594;p=0.014)和肿瘤部位(β=-12.031;p=0.021,倾向于下胃肠道肿瘤)与交叉呈负相关。重要的是,多变量加权线性回归显示,交叉与 30 天死亡率(β=+0.125;p=0.033)、吻合口漏率(β=+0.550;p=0.004)和早期并发症(β=+1.255;p=0.001)之间存在统计学上的正相关关系,这是基于意向治疗分析的结果。
根据意向治疗分析,交叉与 MIS 组的 30 天死亡率、吻合口漏率和早期并发症的增加有关,尽管我们的分析并未评估因果关系。通过手术量对手术医师进行认证,并在初始试验中排除高合并症患者,对于减少交叉和优化 RCT 的有效性非常重要。