Surgical site wound infection and wound pain after video-assisted thoracoscopy in patients with lung cancer: A meta-analysis |
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Authors: | Jianhua Zhou Zhiguo Ren Xiwen Gao Xiaohui Zhou |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Surgery, Shanghai Chest Hospital, Shanghai Jiao Tong University, Shanghai, China;2. Department of Respiratory Medicine, 971 Hospital of Qingdao People's Liberation Army, Qingdao, China;3. Department of Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine of Minhang Hospital, Fudan University, Shanghai, China;4. Department of Respiratory Medicine, Shanghai Jiao Tong University Affiliated Sixth People's Hospital, Shanghai, China |
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Abstract: | A meta-analysis was performed to comprehensively assess the effects of video-assisted thoracoscopy on surgical site wound infection and wound pain in patients with lung cancer. Studies on video-assisted thoracoscopy for lung cancer were collected from PubMed, EMBASE, Cochrane Library, Web of Science, China National Knowledge Infrastructure, Chinese Biomedical Literature Database, and Wanfang database, from inception to January 2023. Two researchers independently screened the literature, extracted the data, and evaluated the quality of the included studies according to the inclusion and exclusion criteria. Meta-analysis was performed using RevMan 5.4 software. Thirty-one articles with a total of 3608 patients were included, with 1809 in the video-assisted thoracoscopy group and 1799 in the control group. Compared with the control group, video-assisted thoracoscopy significantly reduced surgical site wound infection (odds ratio: 0.22, 95% confidence interval [CI]: 0.14–0.33, P < .001) and surgical site wound pain at postoperative day 1 (standardised mean difference [SMD]: −0.90, 95% CI: −1.17 to −0.64, P < .001) and postoperative day 3 (SMD: −1.59, 95% CI: −2.25 to −0.92, P < .001). Thus, these results showed that video-assisted thoracoscopy may have beneficial outcomes by reducing surgical site wound infection and pain. However, owing to the large variation in sample sizes and some methodological shortcomings, further validation is needed in future studies with higher quality and larger sample sizes. |
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Keywords: | wound infection wound pain |
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