Schizas D, Frountzas M, Lidoriki I, Spartalis E, Toutouzas K, Dimitroulis D, Liakakos T, Mylonas K S
First Department of Surgery, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, Laikon General Hospital, Athens, Greece.
Laboratory of Experimental Surgery and Surgical Research, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, Athens, Greece.
Ann R Coll Surg Engl. 2020 Feb;102(2):120-132. doi: 10.1308/rcsann.2019.0113. Epub 2019 Sep 11.
The high morbidity and mortality rates after oesophagectomy indicate the need for rigorous patient selection and preoperative risk assessment. Although muscle mass depletion has been proposed as a potential prognostic factor for postoperative complications and decreased survival in gastrointestinal cancer patients, available data are conflicting. The purpose of the present meta-analysis is to determine whether sarcopenia predicts postoperative outcomes in patients undergoing oesophagectomy.
The databases MEDLINE, SCOPUS, Clinicaltrials.gov, CENTRAL and Google Scholar were searched for studies reporting on the effect of sarcopenia on postoperative outcomes following oesophageal cancer surgery. Outcomes included surgical complications, anastomotic leakage, respiratory complications, cardiovascular complications, postoperative infections, major complications and overall complications. The random effects model (DerSimonian-Laird) was used to calculate pooled effect estimates when high heterogeneity was encountered, otherwise the fixed-effects (Mantel-Haenszel) model was implemented.
A total of eight studies involving 1488 patients diagnosed with oesophageal cancer and who underwent oesophagectomy were included in the meta-analysis. The presence of sarcopenia did not significantly increase the rate of surgical complications (odds ratio, OR, 0.86, 95% confidence interval, CI, 0.40-1.85), anastomotic leakage (OR 0.75, 95% CI 0.42-1.35), respiratory complications (OR 0.56, 95% CI 0.21-1.48), cardiovascular complications (OR 0.94, 95% CI 0.31-2.83), postoperative infection (OR 1.14, 95% CI 0.52-2.50), major complications (OR 0.81, 95% CI 0.23-2.82) or overall postoperative complications (OR 0.80, 95% 0.32-1.99).
Sarcopenia does not seem to affect postoperative complication rates of patients undergoing oesophagectomy for oesophageal cancer. Future research should focus on determining whether prognosis differs according to muscle mass in this patient population.
食管癌切除术后的高发病率和死亡率表明,需要严格筛选患者并进行术前风险评估。尽管肌肉量减少被认为是胃肠道癌患者术后并发症和生存率降低的潜在预后因素,但现有数据相互矛盾。本荟萃分析的目的是确定肌肉减少症是否能预测食管癌切除患者的术后结局。
检索MEDLINE、SCOPUS、Clinicaltrials.gov、CENTRAL和谷歌学术数据库,查找关于肌肉减少症对食管癌手术后术后结局影响的研究。结局包括手术并发症、吻合口漏、呼吸并发症、心血管并发症、术后感染、主要并发症和总体并发症。当遇到高度异质性时,使用随机效应模型(DerSimonian-Laird)计算合并效应估计值,否则采用固定效应(Mantel-Haenszel)模型。
共有八项研究纳入了本荟萃分析,这些研究涉及1488例被诊断为食管癌并接受了食管癌切除术的患者。肌肉减少症的存在并未显著增加手术并发症发生率(优势比,OR,0.86,95%置信区间,CI,0.40-1.85)、吻合口漏发生率(OR 0.75,95% CI 0.42-1.35)、呼吸并发症发生率(OR 0.56,95% CI 0.21-1.48)、心血管并发症发生率(OR 0.94,95% CI 0.31-2.83)、术后感染发生率(OR 1.14,95% CI 0.52-2.50)、主要并发症发生率(OR 0.81,95% CI 0.23-2.82)或总体术后并发症发生率(OR 0.80,95% 0.32-1.99)。
肌肉减少症似乎并不影响食管癌患者接受食管癌切除术后的并发症发生率。未来的研究应侧重于确定该患者群体中肌肉量不同时预后是否存在差异。