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BMC Cancer. 2012; 12: 6.
Published online 2012 January 4. doi:  10.1186/1471-2407-12-6
PMCID: PMC3320521
Systematic review: conservative treatments for secondary lymphedema
Mark Oremus,1,2 Ian Dayes,3 Kathryn Walker,1,2 and Parminder Rainacorresponding author1,2
1Department of Clinical Epidemiology and Biostatistics, McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada
2McMaster Evidence-based Practice Centre, McMaster University, 1280 Main Street West, DTC-310, Hamilton, Ontario, L8S 4K1, Canada
3Department of Oncology, McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada
corresponding authorCorresponding author.
Mark Oremus: oremusm/at/mcmaster.ca; Ian Dayes: ian.dayes/at/jcc.hhsc.ca; Kathryn Walker: walkk/at/mcmaster.ca; Parminder Raina: praina/at/mcmaster.ca
Received April 4, 2011; Accepted January 4, 2012.
Abstract
Background
Several conservative (i.e., nonpharmacologic, nonsurgical) treatments exist for secondary lymphedema. The optimal treatment is unknown. We examined the effectiveness of conservative treatments for secondary lymphedema, as well as harms related to these treatments.
Methods
We searched MEDLINE®, EMBASE®, Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials®, AMED, and CINAHL from 1990 to January 19, 2010. We obtained English- and non-English-language randomized controlled trials or observational studies (with comparison groups) that reported primary effectiveness data on conservative treatments for secondary lymphedema. For English-language studies, we extracted data in tabular form and summarized the tables descriptively. For non-English-language studies, we summarized the results descriptively and discussed similarities with the English-language studies.
Results
Thirty-six English-language and eight non-English-language studies were included in the review. Most of these studies involved upper-limb lymphedema secondary to breast cancer. Despite lymphedema's chronicity, lengths of follow-up in most studies were under 6 months. Many trial reports contained inadequate descriptions of randomization, blinding, and methods to assess harms. Most observational studies did not control for confounding. Many studies showed that active treatments reduced the size of lymphatic limbs, although extensive between-study heterogeneity in areas such as treatment comparisons and protocols, and outcome measures, prevented us from assessing whether any one treatment was superior. This heterogeneity also precluded us from statistically pooling results. Harms were rare (< 1% incidence) and mostly minor (e.g., headache, arm pain).
Conclusions
The literature contains no evidence to suggest the most effective treatment for secondary lymphedema. Harms are few and unlikely to cause major clinical problems.
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