Improved standards for outcome reporting in breast reconstruction are needed, according to a review published online in The Journal of the National Cancer Institute.
Every year in the United States as many as 40% of women with breast cancer undergo a mastectomy. They say the most valuable factor in their decision-making is information from health professionals. However, that information is largely dependent on the quality, reporting and interpretation of research data on surgical procedures.
To summarize the reporting standards of surgical outcomes in breast reconstruction, Shelley Potter, MD, of the University of Bristol, and colleagues, reviewed 134 studies reporting surgical outcomes of breast reconstruction involving more than 42,000 women. More than half of the studies, or 55%, were cohort studies, 36.6% were case series studies, and 8.2% were randomized controlled trials. Specifically, the researchers looked at prospective or retrospective accrual of data, duration of follow-up, proportion of complications, reporting of total and procedure-specific complications, severity of complications, length of hospital stay and adjustment for risk factors such as smoking or radiotherapy.
The researchers found an overall lack of reporting and inconsistency in the data regarding outcomes of breast reconstruction. The studies defined clearly fewer than 20% of the complications they reported, and only half the studies considered risk factors for adverse outcomes.
“Details such as the severity of complications (41.8% of all studies), duration of follow-up (58.2%) and overall complication rates (59.7%) were often omitted,” the authors wrote.
The authors wrote that their review has indicated the need for a standardized approach to outcome assessment in breast reconstruction that also includes non-clinical factors.
“Traditional clinical outcomes remain important, but patient-reported outcomes such as satisfaction, body image, functional results, and cosmetic outcome will also need to be incorporated if the outcomes selected are to be of value to the women making decisions about reconstruction,” they write.
“In contrast to the search for new breast cancer therapies to improve survival, a long-term and enormously expensive task, improved standards for outcome reporting for reconstruction, and other aspects of breast cancer treatment have the potential to improve patient quality of life in the short term at a relatively modest cost,” Monica Morrow, MD, and Andrea L. Pusic, MD, of Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, stated in an accompanying editorial, that the review points to the need for improved outcome reporting as scientists continue to search for therapies.