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Compression therapy following endovenous thermal ablation of varicose veins: a systematic review and meta-analysis.

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OBJECTIVEG A systematic review and meta-analysis were performed to evaluate the necessity for compression therapy with elastic stockings following endovenous thermal ablation (EVTA) for chronic venous insufficiency. METHODS MedLine, ScienceDirect… Click to show full abstract

OBJECTIVEG A systematic review and meta-analysis were performed to evaluate the necessity for compression therapy with elastic stockings following endovenous thermal ablation (EVTA) for chronic venous insufficiency. METHODS MedLine, ScienceDirect and the Cochrane Library were searched for the relevant literature according to the inclusion and exclusion criteria. Two researchers independently extracted data and assessed the quality of the literature. Randomized controlled trials comparing the use of elastic stockings for compression therapy versus no compression therapy following RFA or EVLA for varicose veins were included in this study. The primary outcome of postoperative pain was assessed using the visual analogue pain scale (VAS). Secondary outcomes included the bruising score, quality of life, venous clinical severity score, time to return to normal activities, complications, and the rate of saphenous vein occlusion. The mixed effect model or random effect model was used to calculate relative risk (RR), mean difference (MD) or standardized mean difference (SMD) following the heterogeneity test. Sensitivity analysis was performed for outcomes with high heterogeneity (I2>50%). Outcomes were described qualitatively for studies that could not be pooled. RESULTS Six RCTs with 1,045 subjects were included. Overall, postoperative compression therapy significantly reduced the mean pain in the first 10 days post-EVTA (MD= - 4.98,95% CI: -8.71 to -1.24), and the time to return to normal activities (MD=-1.01, 95% CI: -1.97 to -0.06). In terms of the bruising score, the venous clinical severity score, complications (RR=1.05,95% CI: 0.55-2.00), quality of life at 2 weeks (MD= -0.71,95% CI: -2.09 to 0.67) and 6 months (MD=0.26,95% CI: -1.22 to 1.74), and the saphenous vein occlusion rate (RR=1.00,95% CI: 0.95-1.04), there were no significant differences between the compression and control groups. CONCLUSION Our study recommends the routine use of compression therapy with elastic stockings following EVTA of varicose veins to reduce postoperative pain and the time to return to normal activities. However, further multi-center and high-quality randomized clinical trials (RCT) are needed for the unified treatment for varicose veins, the target population as well as the duration of compression therapy on whether elastic stockings is beneficial following EVTA.

Keywords: compression therapy; compression; analysis; varicose veins

Journal Title: Annals of vascular surgery
Year Published: 2021

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