1. Thromboembolism during neoadjuvant therapy for rectal cancer: a systematic review.
- Author
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Smart, P. J., Burbury, K. L., Lynch, A. C., Mackay, J. R., and Heriot, A. G.
- Subjects
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THROMBOEMBOLISM , *RECTAL cancer , *META-analysis , *CANCER patients , *LITERATURE reviews - Abstract
Aim Thromboembolism ( TE) is a common, costly and morbid complication that is also associated with decreased survival in cancer patients. However, the risk of cancer-associated TE varies because of the multitude of patient-, cancer- and treatment-related influences. Thromboprophylaxis ( TP) is currently not widely adopted in the ambulant population. A review of the literature was undertaken to determine the rate of TE and the benefit of TP in patients with rectal cancer during neoadjuvant therapy (n T). Method A systematic literature search of electronic databases, including Pub Med and Embase, was performed (1995-2012) for all studies assessing n T in rectal cancer. Data were extracted and used to assess study design, patient demographic and clinical characteristics, treatment protocols and TE incidence. A systematic review was conducted to identify the rates of TE. The search strategy included text terms and Me SH headings for TP, rectal cancer and n T. Results Twelve of 86 studies met quality criteria for reporting TE complications and described 10 pulmonary emboli and three deep-vein thromboses in 3375 patients (overall TE rate = 0.38%). Ninety per cent of pulmonary emboli reported were fatal, suggesting significant under-reporting of TE events, even in high-quality studies. Conclusion The risk of fatal pulmonary embolism in studies examining n T in rectal cancer that reported complications systematically was one in 375 (0.27%; 95% CI: 0.09-0.44%). The overall TE rate, as well as the effectiveness of TP during n T, remains unknown. TE events should be systematically reported using common terminology frameworks in cancer studies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
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