Prevalence and incidence of venous leg ulcers—A systematic review and meta‐analysis

Author:

Probst Sebastian1234ORCID,Saini Camille1,Gschwind Géraldine1,Stefanelli Alessio1,Bobbink Paul15,Pugliese Marie‐Thérèse1,Cekic Sezen6,Pastor Damien7,Gethin Georgina148

Affiliation:

1. Geneva School of Health Science HES‐SO University of Applied Sciences and Arts, Western Switzerland Geneva Switzerland

2. Care Directorate University Hospital Geneva Geneva University Hospitals Geneva Switzerland

3. Faculty of Medicine Nursing and Health Sciences Monash University Melbourne Victoria Australia

4. College of Medicine Nursing and Health Sciences University of Galway Galway Ireland

5. Faculty of Biology and Medicine, University Institute of Higher Education and Research in Healthcare University of Lausanne Lausanne Switzerland

6. Department of Psychology University of Geneva Geneva Switzerland

7. Department of Dermatology and Venereology Geneva University Hospitals Geneva Switzerland

8. Alliance for Research and Innovation in Wounds University of Galway Galway Ireland

Abstract

AbstractVenous leg ulcers (VLU) represent a major public health challenge. Little is known about the prevalence and incidence of VLU internationally. Published studies are usually reporting different estimates because of disparities in study designs and measurement methods. Therefore, we conducted a systematic literature review and meta‐analysis to identify the prevalence and incidence of VLU internationally and to characterise the population as reported in these studies. Studies were identified from searches in Medline (PubMed), CINAHL Complete (EBSCOhost), Embase, Scopus, Web of Science, LiSSa (Littérature Scientifique en Santé), Google Scholar and Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews up to November 2022. Studies were included if their primary outcomes were reported as a period prevalence or point prevalence or cumulative incidence or incidence VLU rate. Fourteen studies met the inclusion criteria, 10 reporting estimates of prevalence, three reporting both prevalence and incidence estimates and one incidence. All were included in meta‐analyses. The results show a pooled prevalence of 0.32% and a pooled incidence of 0.17%. Our results highlighted an extreme heterogeneity across effect sizes for both prevalence and incidence, which prevent a meaningful interpretation of pooled indexes and argue for further studies with specific prevalence‐type reported and target population under study.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Dermatology,Surgery

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