Impact of general anaesthesia in overall and disease-free survival compared to other types of anaesthesia in patients undergoing surgery for cutaneous melanoma: a systematic review and meta-analysis protocol
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BMJ Open
Abstract
Cutaneous melanoma is an aggressive type
of skin cancer. Anaesthetic agents may have an impact
on the immune response, postoperative neurohumoral
response and tumour progression. This systematic review
aims to evaluate the impact of general anaesthesia on
overall and disease-free survival compared with other
types anaesthesia in patients undergoing surgery for
cutaneous melanoma.
Methods and analysis The review will analyse data from
controlled and observational studies of patients undergoing
surgery for melanoma under general anaesthesia
compared with other types of anaesthesia. The primary
outcomes are overall survival and disease-free survival.
The secondary outcomes are health-related quality of
life, time to tumour progression, distant disease-free
survival, time to treatment failure, cancer-specific survival,
biochemical recurrence, return of intended oncological
therapy, days alive and out of the hospital at 90 days,
cost analysis and adverse events. A comprehensive
literature search will be performed using the MEDLINE,
EMBASE, Cochrane CENTRAL, Web of Science, LILACS and
IBECS databases. Grey literature will also be searched.
Risk of methodological bias will be assessed using The
Cochrane Collaboration’s revised tool for assessing risk
of bias in randomised trials (RoB 2.0) and the Newcastle–
Ottawa scale. Two reviewers will independently assess
the eligibility of studies and risk of bias; a third author
will solve discrepancies. One author will perform data
extraction and the other will check the process and data.
Qualitative analysis will be carried out using all included
studies. A meta-analysis using a random-effects model for
pooled risk estimates will be carried out for the two main
outcomes and for selected secondary outcomes if they
conform to previously stated criteria. The GRADE approach
will be used to summarise the quality of evidence.
Ethics and dissemination Ethics approval is not required
as we analyse data from previously reported studies.
Description
p. 1-6.: tab. p&b.
Citation
MELO, Andreia Cristina de et al. Impact of general anaesthesia in overall and disease-free survival compared to other types of anaesthesia in patients undergoing surgery for cutaneous melanoma: a systematic review and meta-analysis protocol. BMJ Open, v. 9, p. 1-6, 2019.