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Bleomycin for Head and Neck Venolymphatic Malformations: A Systematic Review
Venolymphatic malformations are rare benign vascular lesions of the head and neck. Sclerotherapy has become the first-line therapy of these lesions with bleomycin being a sclerosing agent commonly used. To perform a systematic review of the published literature to synthesize evidence on the safety a...
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Published in: | Canadian journal of neurological sciences 2021-05, Vol.48 (3), p.365-371 |
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Main Authors: | , , , |
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Subjects: | |
Citations: | Items that this one cites Items that cite this one |
Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | Venolymphatic malformations are rare benign vascular lesions of the head and neck. Sclerotherapy has become the first-line therapy of these lesions with bleomycin being a sclerosing agent commonly used.
To perform a systematic review of the published literature to synthesize evidence on the safety and efficacy of bleomycin for the treatment of head and neck venolymphatic malformations.
A systematic review of the literature (January 1995-May 2019) was performed in PubMed, Embase, and Cochrane Library databases to identify studies on sclerotherapy of venolymphatic malformations of the head and neck.
A total of 32 studies with participants met the inclusion criteria among which 1121 patients were included in the systematic review.
Two reviewers independently screened and extracted data and assessed the risk of bias. The primary outcome was the subjective or objective reduction of lesion size as well as minor and major complications.
The bleomycin/pingyangmycin sclerotherapy achieved subjective or objective lesion size reduction in 96.3% (95% CI 94.1%-98.5%) of patients. Minor complications were observed in 16.2% and major complications in 1.1%.
Bleomycin is a highly effective treatment of venolymphatic malformations of the head and neck with a low rate of major adverse events. This study represents an update on the "available" evidence, but only low-to-moderate quality studies were available.
This study reviewed 32 studies performed in different parts of the world, but there was heterogeneity of the study designs and interventions. |
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ISSN: | 0317-1671 2057-0155 |
DOI: | 10.1017/cjn.2020.178 |