- 1Surgical Department, Mediterranean Hospital of Cyprus, Limassol, Cyprus
- 2Medical School, European University of Cyprus, Nicosia, Cyprus
- 3Department of Surgery, University of Genoa, Genoa, Italy
- 4Department of Primary Education, School of Education, University of Ioannina, Ioannina, Greece
- 5Faculté de Médecine, Université Paris Descartes, Paris, France
- 6Department of Surgery, Maria Middelares Hospital, Ghent, Belgium
Background: Parastomal hernia presents frequently after construction of a permanent end colostomy. Previous guidelines recommend using a prophylactic mesh for hernia prevention. Randomized controlled trials (RCTs) published hereafter demonstrate conflicting outcomes.
Methods and Analysis: A rapid guideline will be developed and reported in accordance with GRADE, GIN and AGREE-S standards. The steering group will consist of general and colorectal surgeons, members of the EHS Scientific Advisory Board with expertise and experience in guideline development, advanced medical statistics and evidence synthesis, and a certified guideline methodologist. The guideline panel will consist of three general surgeons, three colorectal surgeons, two stoma care nurses, and two patient representatives. A single question will address the safety and efficacy of the use of a prophylactic mesh in patients with a permanent end colostomy, and sensitivity analyses will focus on the use of non-absorbable versus absorbable meshes, and on different anatomical spaces for mesh placement. A systematic review will be conducted and evidence synthesis will be performed by statisticians independently. The results of evidence synthesis will be summarized in summary of findings tables. Recommendation(s) will be finalized through Delphi process of the guideline panel within an evidence-to-decision framework.
Ethics and Dissemination: The funding body will not be involved in the development of this guideline. Conflicts of interest, if any, will be addressed by re-assigning functions or replacing participants with direct conflicts, according to Guidelines International Network recommendations.
Introduction
Background
Parastomal hernia is encountered frequently after permanent end colostomy. Previous systematic reviews suggest that the absolute risk of parastomal hernia is 30% by 12 months and 50% beyond 2 years (1). Using a prophylactic mesh, synthetic or absorbable, has been suggested to reduce the risk of parastomal hernia without increasing perioperative and longer-term stoma-related complications (2,3). Previous guidelines of the European Hernia Society provided a strong recommendation for the use of a prophylactic mesh when constructing an end colostomy (1). More recent data from randomized controlled trials (RCTs) provided conflicting evidence, giving rise to a debate over the optimum management of patients who are planned to have an end colostomy (4,5).
Objective
In view of the new evidence and under consideration of the evolvement in the methodology of guideline development, the objective of this rapid guideline is to provide transparently developed, reliable, and evidence-informed update recommendation(s) on the use of prophylactic mesh for the prevention of parastomal hernia in patients who will have an end colostomy.
Methods
The present protocol adheres to AGREE-S and PRISMA-P reporting standards (6,7). It will be made available on the EHS website for access by healthcare professionals, and EHS members will be invited through various channels (social media, email newsletter) to comment on the content. Relevant comments will be considered by the steering group.
Steering Group
The steering group consists of general and colorectal surgeons with specific interest in hernia surgery, members of the EHS Scientific Advisory Board, and experts in guideline development and evidence synthesis.
Guideline Methodologist
The first author is a certified guideline methodologist (INGUIDE certificate number 2021-L2-V1-00001), has participated in the development of more than 15 clinical practice guidelines, has vast experience in evidence synthesis, and will serve as a guideline methodologist.
Evidence Outreach Team
An evidence outreach team will consist of at least two healthcare professionals with experience in evidence outreach. They will be free of direct and indirect conflicts, and they will act independently from the steering group, they will however consult the guideline methodologist and the guideline panel, as per GRADE standards.
Guideline Panel and External Advisors
The guideline panel will consist of three colorectal surgeons, three general surgeons with specific interest in hernia surgery, two stoma care nurses and two patient representatives. The composition of panel members aims for representation of both genders, different parts of Europe, and academic and non-academic practice. We will ask for input from surgeons who have published RCTs and/or meta-analyses on this topic, however they will not have voting privileges on the direction and the strength of the recommendation(s) within the evidence-to-decision framework, due to indirect conflicts, as per Guidelines International Network guidelines (8). The guideline panel’s and external advisors’ contribution will be acknowledged by authorship in the resulting journal publication (9).
PICO Question
Should prophylactic mesh versus no prophylactic mesh be used in patients who undergo construction of a permanent end colostomy?
Sensitivity/subgroup analysis will address the use of absorbable versus non-absorbable meshes and different anatomic spaces of mesh placement.
Guideline Development Methodology
The guideline development process will adhere to AGREE-S and GRADE guideline development standards, and methodology parameters of rapid recommendations (6,10) and guideline development processes summarized by the Guidelines International Network (11). The guideline panel will be asked to comment on the PICO questions and subgroup analyses, and they will be surveyed to nominate important and critical outcomes, and to define minimal important differences.
The literature search strategy will be developed by a member of the steering group with experience in outreach, knowledge, and evidence search, and it will be built upon the previous systematic review from January 2016 to the present (Supplementary Appendix) (1). The Healthcare Databases Advanced Search (HDAS) interface developed by the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) will be used to interrogate Medical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System Online (MEDLINE). The grey literature will be searched through OpenGrey (Exalead). Relevant terms will be selected to identify eligible reports. Thesaurus headings, search operators, and search limits in each of the above databases will be adapted accordingly.
Risk of bias of eligible studies will be assessed using RoB 2 for randomized trials (12). Study selection will be performed by the evidence outreach team; risk of bias assessment and data extraction will be performed by one member of the evidence outreach team and independently cross-checked by the guideline methodologist. Statistical analyses will be performed by biostatisticians using the methodology reported below.
GRADE evidence tables will be developed by the panel with methodological advice from the methodologist in a face-to-face consensus meeting of the guideline development group. Draft recommendations will be formulated and strength of recommendations will be defined. The recommendations may be refined and their strength may be revised in line with the results of an online Delphi process of panel members. Comments by the Delphi panel must be in accordance with the GRADE methodology in order to be considered. Formulation of recommendations will be informed by GRADE and AGREE-REX (13,14).
Time-to-Event Data Meta-Analysis
For trials including time-to-event outcomes (e.g., elapsed time before a hernia occurs), we will extract the hazard ratio and the standard error of the logarithm of the hazard ratio. If instead of the standard error, the corresponding 95% confidence interval or p-value is reported, we can used them to estimate the standard error. These are standard outputs from a Cox proportional hazards model. If these data are not given, we can approximately estimate the hazard ratio using statistics estimated from a long-rank analysis. If some studies give the hazard ratio but other give risk ratios (or the number of events and sample size in each group), we will combine them in a sensitivity analysis.
Pairwise Meta-Analysis
Mantel-Haenszel pooled odds ratios (or the risk difference in the presence of zero events in at least one group, in one or more studies) will be calculated for binary variables and the standardized mean difference for continuous variables, with corresponding 95% confidence intervals. Where means and p-values will be given, the standard error and the standard deviation will be estimated by calculating the standard error and t-value using the given degrees of freedom. The standard error and the standard deviation will be obtained from confidence intervals by using the formula suggested by the Cochrane Collaboration (15).
Conceptual heterogeneity related to the PICO parameters and the study design will be assessed, and statistical heterogeneity will be explored using the I2 statistic. We will conduct a random effects meta-analysis to estimate the pooled effect and its 95% confidence interval. We will also compute prediction intervals. As a sensitivity analysis, we will conduct a fixed effect meta-analysis. We will explore for small-study effects using funnel plots and statistical tests (e.g., Egger’s test) (16). Statistical analyses will be performed using the meta library in R (17,18).
Target Users
This guideline is intended to be used by general and colorectal surgeons, multidisciplinary team members, stoma care nurses, hospital administrators, policy makers, and patients. The guideline publication will contain a short abstract in plain language to be used by patients.
Publication and Dissemination Strategy
As a EHS-sponsored project, this guideline will be submitted for publication in the Journal of Abdominal Wall Surgery, official journal of the EHS.
Feedback
The steering group will consider constructive feedback received during the conduct of the project via various routes and sources such as letters to the editor and social media. Such feedback will be taken into account in the guideline development process or a future update of the guideline.
Monitoring, Update and Future Steps
Use of the guideline by EHS members will be monitored through an online survey 2 years after publication. The timing of the update of the guideline will be decided by the steering group on the basis of new research data on this topic.
Discussion
Implications for Practice and Research
Stringent criteria defined by GRADE and AGREE-S will be applied to collate, appraise and analyze the available evidence. The guideline is expected to inform decision making, and guide clinical practice and health policy. Guidance will be provided on direction and implications for future research in light of identified evidence gaps.
Strengths and Limitations
The strengths and limitations of rapid guidelines have been previously reported (19-21). The merits of rapid guidelines, including trustworthiness, credibility, and time efficiency have to outweigh the shortcomings, such as the narrow scope and possible missing of resources due to the rapid review process.
Research Ethics
EHS, as the funder, will not be involved in the development of this guideline. Research Ethics Committee approval is not necessary as this project does not involve any identifiable patient data. Conflicts of interest statements will be collected by all guideline panel members before and upon completion of the project. Panel members with direct conflicts will be replaced and participants with indirect conflicts will be re-assigned functions, according to Guidelines International Network recommendations (18).
Conclusion
This rapid guideline will address the use of prophylactic mesh for parastomal hernia prevention in patients who will have an end colostomy. It is expected to provide useful, evidence-based and stakeholder-informed information of the most appropriate management in this context.
Author Contributions
Conception and design, writing or critically revising the manuscript for important intellectual content, final approval of the version to be published, and agreement to be accountable for all aspects of the work in ensuring that questions related to the accuracy or integrity of any part of the work are appropriately investigated and resolved: SA, CS, OK, DM, and FM.
Funding
This project will be funded by the European Hernia Society. The funding body had no influence on the development of this protocol.
Conflict of Interest
The authors report indirect conflict related to a previous publication of a clinical practice guideline including recommendation on parastomal hernia prevention, and having conducted and published systematic reviews and meta-analyses on the topic of interest.
Supplementary Material
The Supplementary Material for this article can be found online at: https://www.frontierspartnerships.org/articles/10.3389/jaws.2022.10509/full#supplementary-material
References
1. Antoniou, SA, Agresta, F, Garcia Alamino, JM, Berger, D, Berrevoet, F, Brandsma, H-T, et al. European Hernia Society Guidelines on Prevention and Treatment of Parastomal Hernias. Hernia (2017) 22:183–98. doi:10.1007/s10029-017-1697-5
2. López-Cano, M, Lozoya-Trujillo, R, Quiroga, S, Sánchez, JL, Vallribera, F, Martí, M, et al. Use of a Prosthetic Mesh to Prevent Parastomal Hernia during Laparoscopic Abdominoperineal Resection: a Randomized Controlled Trial. Hernia (2012) 16:661. doi:10.1007/s10029-012-0952-z
3. Sajid, MS, Kalra, L, Hutson, K, and Sains, P. Parastomal Hernia as a Consequence of Colorectal Cancer Resections Can Prophylactically Be Controlled by Mesh Insertion at the Time of Primary Surgery: a Literature Based Systematic Review of Published Trials. Minerva Chir (2012) 67:289
4. Bemelman, WA. Prosthetic Mesh for Prevention of Parastomal Hernia. Ann Surg (2021) 274(1):29–30. doi:10.1097/SLA.0000000000004895
5. Tabusa, H, Blazeby, JM, Blencowe, N, Callaway, M, Daniels, IR, Gunning, A, et al. Protocol for the UK Cohort Study to Investigate the Prevention of Parastomal Hernia (The CIPHER Study). Colorectal Dis (2021) 23(7):1900–8. doi:10.1111/codi.15621
6.AGREE- S. AGREE II Extension for Surgical Interventions. Available from: https://agree-s.org (Accessed February 27, 2022).
7. Moher, D, Shamseer, L, Shamseer, L, Clarke, M, Ghersi, D, Liberati, A, et al. Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis Protocols (PRISMA-P) 2015 Statement. Syst Rev (2015) 4:1PMC4320440. doi:10.1186/2046-4053-4-1
8. HolgerSchünemann, J, Al-Ansary, LA, and Forland, F. Guidelines International Network: Principles for Disclosure of Interests and Management of Conflicts in Guidelines. Ann Intern Med (2015) 163(7):548–53. doi:10.7326/M14-1885
9.National Library of Medicine. Authorship in MEDLINE. Available from: https://www.nlm.nih.gov/bsd/policy/authorship.html (Accessed July 29, 2020).
10.H Schünemann, J Brożek, G Guyatt, and A Oxman, editors. GRADE Handbook for Grading Quality of Evidence and Strength of Recommendations. The GRADE Working Group (2013). Updated October 2013 Available from: guidelinedevelopment.org/handbook.
11. Schünemann, HJ, Wiercioch, W, Etxeandia, I, Falavigna, M, Santesso, N, Mustafa, R, et al. Guidelines 2.0: Systematic Development of a Comprehensive Checklist for a Successful Guideline enterprise. CMAJ (2014) 186:E123–E142. doi:10.1503/cmaj.131237
12.RoB 2 Tool. A Revised Cochrane Risk of Bias Tool for Randomized Trials. Available from: https://sites.google.com/site/riskofbiastool/welcome/rob-2-0-tool?authuser=0 (Accessed July 29, 2020).
13. Schünemann, H, Broże, J, Guyatt, G, and Oxman, A. GRADE Handbook: 6.4 Presentation of Recommendations (2016). https://gdt.gradepro.org/app/handbook/handbook.html#h.sc6xi7bnhsgh (Accessed July 29, 2020).
14.AGREE-REX Research Team. The Appraisal of Guidelines Research & Evaluation—Recommendation EXcellence (AGREE-REX) (2019). Available from: https://www.agreetrust.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/04/AGREE-REX-2019.pdf (Accessed July 29, 2020).
15.The Cochrane Collaboration. Obtaining Standard Deviations from Standard Errors In: Cochrane Handb Syst Rev Interv Version 510. [updated March 2011]. 2011.
16. Egger, M, Smith, GD, Schneider, M, and Minder, C. Bias in Meta-Analysis Detected by a Simple, Graphical Test. BMJ (1997) 315:629–34. doi:10.1136/bmj.315.7109.629
18.R Core Team. R: A Language and Environment for Statistical Computing. Vienna R Foundation for Statistical Computing (2019). Available from: https://www.R-project.org.
19. Guyatt, G, Agoritsas, T, Lytvyn, L, Siemieniuk, R, and Vandvik, P. BMJ Rapid Recommendations: A Possible Revolution in Clinical Practice Guidelines. Can Journ Gen Int Med (2019) 14(1):6–12. doi:10.22374/cjgim.v14i1.318
20. Akl, EA, Haddaway, NR, Rada, G, and Lotfi, T. Future of Evidence Ecosystem Series: Evidence Synthesis 2.0: when Systematic, Scoping, Rapid, Living, and Overviews of Reviews Come Together. J Clin Epidemiol (2020) 123:162–5. doi:10.1016/j.jclinepi.2020.01.025
Keywords: parastomal hernia, mesh, prophylactic, prevention, rapid guideline, GRADE, AGREE-S, EHS
Citation: Antoniou SA, Stabilini C, Koutsiouroumpa O, Mavridis D and Muysoms F (2022) Protocol for EHS Rapid Guideline: Systematic Review, Meta-Analysis, GRADE Assessment, and European Recommendations on Parastomal Hernia Prevention. J. Abdom. Wall Surg. 1:10509. doi: 10.3389/jaws.2022.10509
Received: 14 March 2022; Accepted: 06 April 2022;
Published: 20 May 2022.
Copyright © 2022 Antoniou, Stabilini, Koutsiouroumpa, Mavridis and Muysoms. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
*Correspondence: Stavros A. Antoniou, stavros.antoniou@hotmail.com