A Systematic Review of Outcome Reporting, Definition and Measurement Heterogeneity in Non-Muscle Invasive Bladder Cancer Effectiveness Trials of Adjuvant, Prophylactic Treatment After Transurethral Resection

Author:

Veskimae Erik1,Subbarayan Selvarani2,Campi Riccardo34,Carron Domitille5,Omar Muhammad Imran2,Yuan Cathy6,Dimitropoulos Konstantinos27,Van Hemelrijck Mieke8,Bryan Richard T.9,N’Dow James27,Babjuk Marek10,Alfred Witjes J.11,Sylvester Richard12,MacLennan Steven2

Affiliation:

1. Department of Urology, Tampere University Hospital, Tampere, Finland

2. Academic Urology Unit, University of Aberdeen, Aberdeen, UK

3. Unit of Urological Robotic Surgery and Renal Transplantation, Careggi Hospital, Florence, Italy

4. Department of Experimental and Clinical Medicine, University of Florence, Florence, Italy

5. Inspiring-health GmbH, Munich, Germany

6. Division of Gastroenterology, Department of Medicine, McMaster University, Hamilton, ON, Canada

7. Department of Urology, Aberdeen Royal Infirmary, NHS Grampian, Aberdeen, UK

8. King’s College London, Faculty of Life Sciences and Medicine, Translational and Oncology Research (TOUR), London, UK

9. Institute of Cancer & Genomic Sciences, University of Birmingham, Birmingham, UK.

10. Department of Urology, 2nd Faculty of Medicine, Hospital Motol, Charles University, Prague, Czech Republic

11. Department of Urology, Radboud University Medical Center, Nijmegen, The Netherlands

12. EAU NMIBC Guidelines Panel, Brussels, Belgium

Abstract

Abstract: BACKGROUND: Heterogenous outcome reporting in non-muscle-invasive bladder cancer (NMIBC) effectiveness trials of adjuvant treatment after transurethral resection (TURBT) has been noted in systematic reviews (SRs). This hinders comparing results across trials, combining them in meta-analyses, and evidence-based decision-making for patients and clinicians. OBJECTIVE: We aimed to systematically review the extent of reporting and definition heterogeneity. METHODS: We included randomized controlled trials (RCTs) identified from SRs comparing adjuvant treatments after TURBT or TURBT alone in patients with NMIBC (with or without carcinoma in situ) published between 2000–2020. Abstracts and full texts were screened independently by two reviewers. Data were extracted by one reviewer and checked by another. RESULTS: We screened 807 abstracts; from 15 SRs, 57 RCTs were included. Verbatim outcome names were coded to standard outcome names and organised using the Williamson and Clarke taxonomy. Recurrence (98%), progression (74%), treatment response (in CIS studies) (40%), and adverse events (77%) were frequently reported across studies. However, overall (33%) and cancer-specific (33%) survival, treatment completion (17%) and treatment change (37%) were less often reported. Quality of Life (3%) and economic outcomes (2%) were rarely reported. Heterogeneity was evident throughout, particularly in the definitions of progression and recurrence, and how CIS patients were handled in the analysis of studies with predominantly papillary patients, highlighting further issues with the definition of recurrence and progression vs treatment response for CIS patients. Data reporting was also inconsistent, with some trials reporting event rates at various time-points and others reporting time-to-event with or without Hazard Ratios. Adverse events were inconsistently reported. QoL data was absent in most trials. CONCLUSIONS: Heterogenous outcome reporting is evident in NMIBC effectiveness trials. This has profound implications for meta-analyses, SRs and evidence-based treatment decisions. A core outcome set is required to reduce heterogeneity. PATIENT SUMMARY: This systematic review found inconsistencies in outcome definitions and reporting, pointing out the urgent need for a core outcome set to help improve evidence-based treatment decisions.

Publisher

IOS Press

Subject

Urology,Oncology

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