1. A Systematic Review of the Quality of Evidence of Ablative Therapy for Small Renal Masses
- Author
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Craig Folsom, Philipp Dahm, Mina Zarei, Phalgoon Shah, Diana C. Kang, Taryn L. Stoffs, Drew Palmer, Rebecca J. Beyth, and Molly M. Neuberger
- Subjects
Ablation Techniques ,Data abstraction ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Pediatrics ,Evidence-Based Medicine ,business.industry ,Urology ,Strengthening the reporting of observational studies in epidemiology ,Original research ,Kidney Neoplasms ,Surgery ,Quality of evidence ,Sample size determination ,Ablative case ,medicine ,Humans ,Observational study ,business - Abstract
We critically assessed the methodological and reporting quality of published studies of ablative techniques for small renal masses.We performed a systematic PubMed® and EMBASE® literature search from January 1966 to March 2010 to identify all full text, original research publications on ablative therapy for renal masses. Six reviewers working independently in 3 teams performed duplicate data abstraction using Strengthening the Reporting of Observational Studies in Epidemiology criteria, which were pilot tested in a separate sample.A total of 117 original research publications published in a 15-year period (1995 to 2009) met eligibility criteria. No randomized, controlled trials were identified. All studies were observational and 88.9% had 1 arm with no comparison group. Median sample size was 18 patients (IQR 5.5, 40.0) and 53.8% of studies included 20 or fewer patients. Median followup was 14.0 months (IQR 8.0, 23.8) and only 19.7% of studies had an average followup of greater than 24 months. Of the studies 20.5% mentioned the number of operators involved and only 6.0% provided information on their experience level. Of the studies 66.7% addressed the recurrence rate. Disease specific and overall survival was reported in only 15.4% and 16.2% of studies, respectively.The published literature on the therapeutic efficacy of ablative therapy for renal masses is largely limited to uncontrolled, 1-arm observational studies. In the absence of higher quality evidence ablative therapy outside research studies should be limited to select patients who are not candidates for surgical intervention.
- Published
- 2012
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