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Assessment of post-operative quality of life in gastric cancer: a systematic review Ana Rita Marques; Natália Ferreira; Mylene Costa; Paula Joana Moreira; Paula Campelo; Paulo Leandro; Pedro Barbosa; Pedro Mendes Supervisors: Camila Dias and Mário Dinis Ribeiro FMUP/ Serviço de Bioestatística e Informática Médica 1st year, Class 17 Assessment of post-operative quality of life in gastric cancer Introduction Meta-analysis, a final step in a systematic review: “(…) statistical pooling of data across studies to generate summary estimates of effects .(…) the term “effect” refers to any measure of association between exposure and outcome” [1] “Meta-analysis is a statistical procedure that integrates the results of several independent studies considered to be “combinable”.” Huke MF, 1988 [1] Pai M, McCulloch M, Gordan JD, Pai N, Enanoria W, Kennedy G, Tharyan P, Colford,Jr JM. Systematic reviews and meta-analyses: An illustrated, step-by-step guide The National Medical Journal of India Vol.17 No.2,2004 Supervisors: Camila Dias and Mário Dinis Ribeiro 1st year, Class 17 Assessment of post-operative quality of life in gastric cancer Introduction Gastric cancer as: GASTRIC CANCER IN CANCER DEATH RATE (1973-92) • A malignant cell growth; • Second leading cause of cancer deaths worldwide; Surgery as the major way for treatment: • Subtotal gastrectomy; • Total gastrectomy; Rate of surviving is increasing http://plan1998.cancer.gov/PRGRES.htm (National Cancer Institute) Quality of life (QoL) is then particularly important in health care. Kaptein AA, Morita S, Sakamoto J. Quality of life in gastric cancer World J Gastroenterol 2005 http://massgeneral.org/cancer/about/providers/surgical/gastric.asp Supervisors: Camila Dias and Mário Dinis Ribeiro 1st year, Class 17 Assessment of post-operative quality of life in gastric cancer Introduction Quality of life (QoL): “The functional effect of an illness and its consequent therapy upon a patient, as perceived by the patient.” [2] “The degree to which a person enjoys the important possibilities of his or her life.” [3] Instruments for studying QoL: • Questionnaires • Interviews [2]Schipper H, Clinch J, Olweny LM. Definitions and conceptual issues. Spilker B Philadelphia: Lippincott-Raven, 1996 [3]Qualitty of life Research Unit, University of Toronto, www.gdrc.org/uem/qol-define.html. Supervisors: Camila Dias and Mário Dinis Ribeiro 1st year, Class 17 Assessment of post-operative quality of life in gastric cancer Objectives • Assess and summarize QoL in patients submitted to surgery for gastric cancer • Clarifying validity of the instruments used Supervisors: Camila Dias and Mário Dinis Ribeiro 1st year, Class 17 Assessment of post-operative quality of life in gastric cancer Methods Inclusion criteria: Include a population with gastric cancer that have been submitted to a gastrectomy Include post-surgery QoL evaluation MESH (Medical Subject Headings) terms: • Quality of life • Gastrectomy • Stomach neoplasm Limits of the research •Language: English, French, Spanish and Italian •Humans •Publication Date: from 1950 to September 2005 •Only items with abstracts Supervisors: Camila Dias and Mário Dinis Ribeiro 1st year, Class 17 Assessment of post-operative quality of life in gastric cancer Methods Exclusion criteria: Title: Refer to radiotherapy / chemotherapy Not refer specifically to gastric cancer Abstract: Not have abstracts Not refer to QoL If there is only one case in study Not refer to a post-operative instrument (questionnaire) Not approach QoL in a generic view If patients have more than one type of cancer besides gastric cancer All text: If we could not have access to the manuscript Supervisors: Camila Dias and Mário Dinis Ribeiro 1st year, Class 17 Assessment of post-operative quality of life in gastric cancer Methods : Query's Definition Quality of life [MESH] AND (stomach neoplasm [MESH] OR Gastric cancer OR stomach carcinoma) NOT intestinal cancer AND (gastrectomy [MESH] OR gastric surgery) NOT chemotherapy (175) With limits: English and humans and within the defined publication date and with abstracts – 109 articles Italian and humans and within the defined publication date and with abstracts – 4 articles (Surgical treatment OR gastrectomy OR surgery) AND (gastric carcinoma OR gastric cancer OR stomach neoplasm OR stomach cancer) AND quality of life [MESH] AND questionnaires(42) With limits: Humans and within the defined publication date – 42 articles English and humans and within the defined publication date – 32 articles Gastric cancer [MESH] AND surgery [MESH] AND quality of life [MESH] AND carcinoma [MESH] AND neoplasm [MESH] (51) With limits: English and humans – 33 articles English and humans and within the defined publication date – 33 articles Supervisors: Camila Dias and Mário Dinis Ribeiro 1st year, Class 17 Assessment of post-operative quality of life in gastric cancer Methods : Flow chart START Articles search (PubMed) Apply inclusion criteria Read titles of included articles Apply exclusion criteria Article not excluded Excluded by 2 revisors no yes Article excluded Without agreement Read abstract of articles END Ask opinion of a 3rd revisor no yes Excluded by 3rd revisor Articles included in the study no Apply exclusion criteria Article not excluded no Excluded by 2 revisors yes no Without agreement Excluded by 3rd revisor Ask opinion of a 3rd revisor Without agreement Excluded by 2 revisors Apply exclusion criteria yes yes Article excluded Supervisors: Camila Dias and Mário Dinis Ribeiro Read full articles Ask opinion of a 3rd revisor no Excluded by 3rd revisor 1st year, Class 17 Assessment of post-operative quality of life in gastric cancer Expected results • 61 included articles •QoL after gastric cancer surgery lower than QoL of the general population •Different values of QoL between patients submitted to total gastrectomy and sub-total gastrectomy Possible heterogeneity View Gantt Map Supervisors: Camila Dias and Mário Dinis Ribeiro 1st year, Class 17