Endovenous thermal ablation for healing venous ulcers and preventing recurrence
- PMID: 24096603
- PMCID: PMC6492493
- DOI: 10.1002/14651858.CD009494.pub2
Endovenous thermal ablation for healing venous ulcers and preventing recurrence
Update in
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Endovenous ablation for venous leg ulcers.Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2023 Jul 27;7(7):CD009494. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD009494.pub3. Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2023. PMID: 37497816 Free PMC article.
Abstract
Background: Venous leg ulcers represent the worst extreme within the spectrum of chronic venous disease. Affecting up to 3% of the adult population, this typically chronic, recurring condition significantly impairs quality of life, and its treatment places a heavy financial burden upon healthcare systems. The current mainstay of treatment for venous leg ulcers is compression therapy, which has been shown to enhance ulcer healing rates. Open surgery on the veins in the leg has been shown to reduce ulcer recurrence rates, but it is an unpopular option and many patients are unsuitable. The efficacy of the newer, minimally-invasive endovenous thermal techniques has been established in uncomplicated superficial venous disease, and these techniques are now beginning to be used in the management of venous ulceration, though the evidence for this treatment is currently unclear. It is hypothesised that, when used with compression, ablation may further reduce pressures in the leg veins, resulting in improved rates of healing. Furthermore, since long-term patient concordance with compression is relatively poor, it may prove more popular, effective and cost-effective to provide a single intervention to reduce recurrence, rather than life-long treatment with compression.
Objectives: To determine the effects of superficial endovenous thermal ablation on the healing, recurrence and quality of life of people with active or healed venous ulcers.
Search methods: In August 2013 we searched Cochrane Wounds Group Specialised Register; The Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (CENTRAL) (The Cochrane Library); Ovid MEDLINE; Ovid MEDLINE (In-Process & Other Non-Indexed Citations); Ovid EMBASE; and EBSCO CINAHL. There were no restrictions on the language of publication but there was a date restriction based on the fact that superficial endovenous thermal ablation is a comparatively new medical technology.
Selection criteria: Randomised clinical trials comparing endovenous thermal ablative techniques with compression therapy alone for venous leg ulcers were eligible for inclusion. Trials had to report on at least one objective measure of ulcer healing (primary outcome) such as proportion of ulcers healed at a given time point, time to complete healing, change in ulcer size, proportion of ulcers recurring over a given time period, or at a specific point, and ulcer-free days. Secondary outcomes sought included patient-reported quality of life, economic data and adverse events.
Data collection and analysis: Details of potentially eligible studies were extracted and summarised using a data extraction table. Data extraction and validity assessment were performed independently by two review authors, and any disagreements resolved by consensus or by arbitration of a third review author.
Main results: No eligible randomised controlled trials were identified. There is an absence of evidence regarding the effects of superficial endovenous thermal ablation on ulcer healing, recurrence or quality of life of people with venous leg ulcer disease.
Authors' conclusions: The review identified no randomised controlled trials on the effects on ulcer healing, recurrence or quality of life, of superficial endovenous thermal ablation in people with active or healed venous leg ulcers. Adequately-powered, high quality randomised controlled trials comparing endovenous thermal ablative interventions with compression therapy are urgently required to explore this new treatment strategy. These should measure and report outcomes that include time to ulcer healing, ulcer recurrence, quality of life and cost-effectiveness.
Conflict of interest statement
All authors have worked in an academic department which has previously received unconditional funding from Diomed/Angiodynamics®. This was used to help fund a research nurse to assist with objective assessments in the context of randomised controlled trials which are not included in this review.
References
References to studies excluded from this review
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- Pannier F, Rabe E. Endovenous laser treatment with the 980 nm diode‐laser in patients with venous leg ulcers. Phlebologie 2007;36(4):179‐85.
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- Sharif MA, Lau LL, Lee B, Hannon RJ, Soong CV. Role of endovenous laser treatment in the management of chronic venous insufficiency. Annals of Vascular Surgery 2007;21(5):551‐5. - PubMed
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- Teo TK, Tay KH, Lin SE, Tan SG, Lo RH, Taneja M, et al. Endovenous laser therapy in the treatment of lower‐limb venous ulcers. Journal of Vascular and Interventional Radiology 2010;21(5):657‐62. - PubMed
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- Viarengo LM, Poterio‐Filho J, Poterio GM, Menezes FH, Meirelles GV. Endovenous laser treatment for varicose veins in patients with active ulcers: measurement of intravenous and perivenous temperatures during the procedure. Dermatologic Surgery 2007;33(10):1234‐42. - PubMed
Additional references
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- Baker SR, Stacey MC, Jopp‐McKay AG, Hoskin SE, Thompson PJ. Epidemiology of chronic venous ulcers. British Journal of Surgery 1991;78(7):864‐7. - PubMed
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- Barwell JR, Davies CE, Deacon J, Harvey K, Minor J, Sassano A, et al. Comparison of surgery and compression with compression alone in chronic venous ulceration (ESCHAR study): randomised controlled trial. Lancet 2004;363(9424):1854‐9. - PubMed
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- Bosanquet N. Costs of venous ulcers ‐ from maintenance therapy to investment programs. Phlebology 1992;7:44‐6.
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- Carradice D, Chetter I. Endovenous laser ablation in the management of varicose veins. In: Greenhalgh RM editor(s). Vascular and Endovascular Consensus Update. BIBA, 2008:581‐4.
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