Department of Physical and Occupational Therapy, Breast Cancer-Related Lymphedema Research Program, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, MA, USA.
Department of Rehabilitation Services, Brigham and Women's Faulkner Hospital; Division of Breast Surgery, Brigham and Women's Hospital; Lymphedema Screening Program, Dana Farber Brigham Cancer Center, Boston, MA, USA.
Breast Cancer Res Treat. 2024 Dec;208(3):471-490. doi: 10.1007/s10549-024-07518-0. Epub 2024 Oct 16.
To systematically review the available literature to determine if axillary web syndrome (AWS) is a risk factor for breast cancer-related lymphedema (BCRL) of the upper extremity.
The study is Prospero-registered (ID CRD42024508169) and follows PRISMA guidelines. Ovid MEDLINE, PubMED, CINAHL, Embase, clinicaltrials.gov and the WHO International Clinical Trials Registry Platform were searched February 24, 2024. Original studies including a cohort of females > 18 years of age diagnosed with AWS after breast cancer surgery and assessing BCRL outcome were included. Scoping, mapping, systematic or qualitative reviews, dissertations without peer-review and conference abstracts were excluded. Methodological quality was assessed using the Modified Downs and Black Checklist and overall certainty in the body of evidence was assessed using Cochrane's GRADE criteria (Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development and Evaluation).
Nine cohort studies representing 3218 participants were included. The median incidence of AWS and BCRL was 31.79% (IQR 8.90%) and 14.29% (IQR 19.01%), respectively, across all studies. Pooled analysis indicated an odds ratio of 1.19 (95% confidence interval 0.60,2.37), with substantial heterogeneity across studies (Chi p < 0.0001, I = 82%). Methodological quality of the included studies was poor to fair, and there was very low certainty evidence indicating no difference in AWS for BCRL risk. The strongest study included, found that AWS more than doubles BCRL risk in the upper extremity.
The available evidence base cannot definitively determine whether AWS imparts risk of BCRL. AWS should be considered a potential risk factor for BCRL, until definitive conclusions from future research are available.
系统回顾现有文献,以确定腋窝网综合征(AWS)是否是乳腺癌相关上肢淋巴水肿(BCRL)的危险因素。
本研究在 PROSPERO 注册(ID CRD42024508169),并遵循 PRISMA 指南。检索了 Ovid MEDLINE、PubMED、CINAHL、Embase、clinicaltrials.gov 和世界卫生组织国际临床试验注册平台,检索日期为 2024 年 2 月 24 日。纳入了包括乳腺癌手术后诊断为 AWS 的女性队列研究,且评估了 BCRL 结局。排除了范围研究、映射研究、系统评价或定性研究、未经同行评审的论文和会议摘要。使用改良的 Downs 和 Black 清单评估方法学质量,并使用 Cochrane 的 GRADE 标准(推荐评估、制定和评价分级)评估证据总体确定性。
共有 9 项队列研究纳入了 3218 名参与者。所有研究中,AWS 和 BCRL 的中位发生率分别为 31.79%(IQR 8.90%)和 14.29%(IQR 19.01%)。汇总分析表明,AWS 的比值比为 1.19(95%置信区间 0.60,2.37),研究间存在很大的异质性(Chi p < 0.0001,I = 82%)。纳入研究的方法学质量为差至尚可,证据确定性极低,表明 AWS 与 BCRL 风险无差异。纳入的最强研究发现,AWS 使上肢 BCRL 风险增加一倍以上。
现有证据基础不能明确确定 AWS 是否会增加 BCRL 的风险。在未来的研究得出明确结论之前,AWS 应被视为 BCRL 的潜在危险因素。