Polidocanol-foam treatment of varicose veins: Quality-of-life impact compared to conventional surgery

•Both polidocanol foam sclerotherapy and conventional surgery had positive impacts on patient quality of life.•Conventional surgery promotes greater improvement in patient quality-of-life than sclerotherapy.•Post-procedure pain and aesthetic concerns about the legs worsen the efficacy of sclerothera...

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Veröffentlicht in:Clinics (São Paulo, Brazil) Brazil), 2024-01, Vol.79, p.100346-100346, Article 100346
Hauptverfasser: Sakugawa, Lissa Severo, Portela, Felipe Soares Oliveira, Louzada, Andressa Cristina Sposato, Portugal, Maria Fernanda Cassino, Teivelis, Marcelo Passos, Mendes, Cynthia de Almeida, Pinheiro, Lucas Lembrança, Silva, Marcelo Fiorelli Alexandrino da, Fioranelli, Alexandre, Wolosker, Nelson
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•Both polidocanol foam sclerotherapy and conventional surgery had positive impacts on patient quality of life.•Conventional surgery promotes greater improvement in patient quality-of-life than sclerotherapy.•Post-procedure pain and aesthetic concerns about the legs worsen the efficacy of sclerotherapy. Lower limb varicose veins are a prevalent disease associated with several available treatment options, including conventional surgery and polidocanol foam sclerotherapy. However, few studies have analyzed therapeutic modality outcomes based on Patient-Reported Outcome Measures (PROMs). This large sample-size study was designed to evaluate the outcomes of polidocanol foam sclerotherapy compared to conventional surgery based on an analysis of PROMs. This was a prospective, observational, and qualitative study of 205 patients who underwent varicose vein treatment with either polidocanol foam sclerotherapy (57 patients, 90 legs) or conventional surgery (148 patients, 236 legs). Patients were preoperatively assessed and re-evaluated 30 days after the procedure using the Venous Disease Severity Score (VCSS) and specific venous disease quality-of-life questionnaires (VEINES-QoL/Sym). Both treatments significantly improved VCSS and VEINES results 30 days after the procedure (p < 0.05). However, surgery promoted greater improvements in VCSS (on average 4.02-points improvement, p < 0.001), VEINES-QoL (average 8-points improvement, p < 0.001), and VEINES-Sym (average 11.66 points improvement, p < 0.001) than did sclerotherapy. Postoperative pain and aesthetic concerns about the legs were the domains of the questionnaires in which the results varied the most between the treatment modalities, with worse results for sclerotherapy. Both polidocanol foam sclerotherapy and conventional surgery positively impact patients’ quality of life after 30 days, but the improvement is more significant for patients who undergo conventional surgery.
ISSN:1807-5932
1980-5322
1980-5322
DOI:10.1016/j.clinsp.2024.100346