Variation in outcome measurement and reporting in studies of pelvic exenteration for locally advanced and recurrent rectal cancer: a systematic review

Aim
There is increasing research interest in pelvic exenteration for locally advanced and recurrent rectal cancer. Heterogeneity in outcome reporting can prevent meaningful interpretation and valid synthesis of pooled data and meta-analyses. The aim of this study was to assess homogeneity in outcome measures in the current pelvic exenteration literature.

Method
MEDLINE, Embase, CENTRAL, CINAHL and Scopus databases were searched from 1990 to 25 April 2023 to identify studies reporting outcomes of pelvic exenteration for locally advanced or recurrent rectal cancer. All reported outcomes were extracted, merged with those of similar meaning and assigned a domain.

Results
Of 4137 abstracts screened, 156 studies met the inclusion criteria. A total of 2765 outcomes were reported, of which 17% were accompanied by a definition. There were 1157 unique outcomes, merged into 84 standardized outcomes and assigned one of seven domains. The most reported domains were complications (147 studies, 94%), survival (127, 81%) and surgical outcomes (123, 79%). Resection margins were reported in 122 studies (78%): the definition of a clear resection margin was not provided in 45 studies (37%), it was unclear in 11 studies (9%) and not specified beyond microscopically ‘clear’ or ‘negative’ in 31 (28%). Measurements of 2, 1, 0.5?mm and any healthy tissue were all used to define R0 margins.

Conclusion
There is significant heterogeneity in outcome measurement and reporting in the current pelvic exenteration literature, raising concerns about the validity of comparative or collaborative studies between centres and meta-analyses. Coordinated international collaboration is required to define core outcome sets and benchmarks.

Aim

The aim of this study was to assess homogeneity in outcome measures in the current pelvic exenteration literature.

Contributors

Kilian G. M. Brown, Jade Pisaniello, Kheng-Seong Ng, Michael J. Solomon, Paul A. Sutton, Sophie Hatcher, Daniel Steffens

Publication

Journal: Colorectal Disease
Volume:
Issue:
Pages: -
Year: 2023
DOI: 10.1111/codi.16844

Further Study Information

Current Stage: Completed
Date:
Funding source(s): Kilian Brown is the recipient of the Mitchell J Notaras Fellowship in Colorectal Surgery (University of Sydney and Colorectal Society of Australia and New Zealand).


Health Area

Disease Category: Cancer

Disease Name: Rectal cancer

Target Population

Age Range: Unknown

Sex: Either

Nature of Intervention: Surgery

Stakeholders Involved

Study Type

- Systematic review of outcomes measured in trials

Method(s)

- Systematic review

MEDLINE, Embase, CENTRAL, CINAHL and Scopus databases were searched from 1990 to 25 April 2023 to identify studies reporting outcomes of pelvic exenteration for locally advanced or recurrent rectal cancer. All reported outcomes were extracted, merged with those of similar meaning and assigned a domain.