Reporting of health-related quality of life in emergency laparotomy trials: a systematic review and narrative synthesis

Authors
Category Systematic review
JournalQUALITY OF LIFE RESEARCH
Year 2023
PurposeEmergency laparotomy is associated with high morbidity for the surgical patient. Understanding patients' health-related quality of life after their surgery is important to enhance the informed consent process, and to enable the evaluation and improvement of surgical care. This review aims to summarise the use of health-related quality of life tools in clinical trials involving patients undergoing emergency laparotomy.MethodsA systematic review was undertaken of the scientific literature published in the MEDLINE (R) and PubMed databases between January 2011 and July 2021. A narrative synthesis approach was chosen to synthesise the diverse range of studies in a structured manner. All included papers were evaluated using the Cochrane Collaboration's tool for assessing risk of bias.ResultsEleven studies were selected for inclusion. Most of the studies had a low risk of bias. Two of the studies used health-related quality of life as the primary outcome measure. A variety of health-related quality of life measurement tools were used; the EQ-5D tool was the most popular questionnaire. Protocol adherence was dependent on the length of time which had elapsed after emergency surgery.ConclusionThere are many perceived challenges to collecting health-related quality of life data in the emergency surgery setting. Many of these can be offset with progressive trial designs. There is a need for further research in the systematic development of patient-reported outcomes for use in emergency surgery.
Epistemonikos ID: f46ab5329c52a86f392b4ea2d82ebdd72616e474
First added on: Nov 01, 2023