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Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews

Surgical interventions for the prevention or treatment of lymphoedema after breast cancer treatment

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Information

DOI:
https://doi.org/10.1002/14651858.CD011433Copy DOI
Database:
  1. Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews
Version published:
  1. 17 December 2014see what's new
Type:
  1. Intervention
Stage:
  1. Protocol
Cochrane Editorial Group:
  1. Cochrane Breast Cancer Group

Copyright:
  1. Copyright © 2014 The Cochrane Collaboration. Published by John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

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Authors

  • Silja P Markkula

    Department of Plastic Surgery, Helsinki University Hospital, Helsinki, Finland

  • Nelson Leung

    Foundation Programme, Oxford Deanery, Health Education Thames Valley, Oxford, UK

  • Victoria B Allen

    Oxford University Clinical Academic Graduate School, Oxford University Hospitals NHS Trust, Oxford, UK

  • Dominic Furniss

    Correspondence to: Department of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, Oxford University Hospitals NHS Trust, Oxford, UK

    [email protected]

Contributions of authors

Draft of the protocol: PA, NL, VA, DF
Study selection: PA, NL, VA, DF
Extract data from studies: PA, NL, VA, DF
Enter data in RevMan: PA, NL, VA
Carry out the analysis: PA, NL, VA, DF
Draft the final review: PA, NL, VA, DF
Disagreement resolution: DF
Update the review: PA, NL, VA, DF

Sources of support

Internal sources

  • No support provided, Other.

External sources

  • No sources of support supplied

Declarations of interest

None known

Version history

Published

Title

Stage

Authors

Version

2019 Feb 19

Surgical interventions for the prevention or treatment of lymphoedema after breast cancer treatment

Review

Silja P Markkula, Nelson Leung, Victoria B Allen, Dominic Furniss

https://doi.org/10.1002/14651858.CD011433.pub2

2014 Dec 17

Surgical interventions for the prevention or treatment of lymphoedema after breast cancer treatment

Protocol

Silja P Markkula, Nelson Leung, Victoria B Allen, Dominic Furniss

https://doi.org/10.1002/14651858.CD011433

PICOs

Population
Intervention
Comparison
Outcome

The PICO model is widely used and taught in evidence-based health care as a strategy for formulating questions and search strategies and for characterizing clinical studies or meta-analyses. PICO stands for four different potential components of a clinical question: Patient, Population or Problem; Intervention; Comparison; Outcome.

See more on using PICO in the Cochrane Handbook.