4.5 Review

Health-related quality of life in patients with extremity bone sarcoma after surgical treatment: a systematic review

Journal

QUALITY OF LIFE RESEARCH
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11136-023-03554-3

Keywords

Health-related quality of life; Health utility; Bone sarcoma; Limb salvage; Amputation; Surgery

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This study aimed to systematically review the measurement of health-related quality of life (HRQoL) in patients with extremity bone sarcoma, with a special focus on the use of preference-weighted instruments. The results showed inconsistent approaches and substantial variation in outcome scores. There is a need for improvement in the use of preference-weighted instruments for HRQoL measurement.
PurposeWe conducted a systematic review of studies reporting on measurement of health-related quality of life (HRQoL), with a special focus on the use of the preference-weighted instruments, in patients with extremity bone sarcoma treated with limb-salvage surgery or amputation.MethodsWe searched MedLine, Embase, Cochrane Library and Web of Science for English-language studies reporting on HRQoL of patients with bone sarcoma from inception to 28 August 2023. All records found were independently reviewed by two reviewers. We used the Newcastle-Ottawa Scale (NOS) and the CONSORT 2010 checklist to assess the quality of the cohort and randomised studies, respectively.ResultsThe search identified 1225 records, of which 16 studies were included for data extraction. Only one study used a preference-weighted instrument for measuring HRQoL in a small sample of patients (n = 28). Ten studies used the generic SF-36 questionnaire, but no preference-weighted HRQoL based on SF-6D was derived from the SF-36 scores. Most studies comparing HRQoL between amputation and limb-salvage surgery reported no significant differences. Twelve cohort studies scored six or more out of nine points based on the NOS. The only randomised study scored 54% on the CONSORT 2010 checklist.ConclusionsThe approaches used to measure HRQoL were inconsistent and outcome scores varied substantially. Only one study used preference-weighted instruments for HRQoL measurement. Future research into the surgical treatment of extremity bone sarcoma should consider the use of preference-weighted instruments to measure HRQoL, which will therefore enable economic evaluation for the growing orthopaedic armamentarium of novel surgical interventions.RegistrationThis systematic review was registered with the PROSPERO International prospective register of systematic reviews (CRD42021282380).

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