New study in Canada says CDT is not needed vs. just sleeves

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kira66715
kira66715 Member Posts: 4,681
edited June 2014 in Lymphedema

This is concerning, the Vodder School is based in Canada, and I've heard from them that there are systemic attempts to "prove" that CDT is unneccesary, and now a study is published. I'll get the article and pick it apart. First it's a tiny study: they enrolled 106 women over the course of several years.

http://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/811611

Medscape Medical News > Oncology
Try Compression Sleeves First for Early Lymphedema
Fran Lowry
Sep 25, 2013

Manual Drainage for Lymphedema Investigated in First-Ever RCT

Breast Cancer News & Perspectives

A trial that randomized women with early lymphedema to receive either complex decongestive therapy (CDT) or compression garments was unable to show that CDT is better than the more conservative, less expensive approach.

Several cohort studies have suggested that CDT — which consists of manual lymphatic massage or drainage, daily bandaging, exercise, and skin care — is superior to compression sleeves for the treatment of lymphedema.

However, a group of Canadian researchers who thought the evidence for such superiority was not good enough decided to conduct a randomized trial to find a definitive answer.

"I actually thought that our study was going to show that complex decongestive therapy was better, but, in fact, it didn't seem to be any more beneficial than elastic compression sleeves, which are much, much cheaper," said lead author Ian S. Dayes, MD, from McMaster University in Hamilton, Ontario.

The results were published online September 16 in the Journal of Clinical Oncology.

More Evidence to Start Conservatively


Dr. Benjamin Anderson
These results add to the mounting evidence against CDT as a first-line treatment for early lymphedema, write Sara H. Javid, MD, and Benjamin O. Anderson, MD, both from the University of Washington in Seattle, in an accompanying editorial.

However, medical insurers should not take these results to mean that CDT is of no value and use them to justify not paying for the treatment, Dr. Anderson emphasized in an interview with Medscape Medical News.

"That is a very specific concern of mine, and is addressed in the editorial," he said.

"As the authors point out, CDT adds a significant cost beyond that of compression garments alone," the editorialists write. "In the modern era of pay-for-performance, this study provides sound evidence that CDT should not be employed as a first-line therapy for those with early lymphedema. Because this study is likely to be cited by insurers as a rationale for denying payment for CDT lymphedema management, the limitations of the study should be clearly noted."

Those limitations are that CDT was tested as a first-line treatment and was not tested in women with advanced disease who have longer-standing, more extensive, or progressive lymphedema.

"The women in the study were enrolled between 2003 and 2009 and their lymphedema was not advanced; it was early," Dr. Anderson explained.

Study Results

In the study, Dr. Dayes and his team enrolled 103 women from 6 centers who had been previously treated for breast cancer and who had lymphedema.

The women, who had a minimum volume difference of 10% between their arms, were randomized to either CDT or compression sleeves. The primary outcome measure was the percent reduction in excess arm volume from baseline to 6 weeks.

The mean reduction in excess arm volume with CDT was 29.0% and with compression sleeves was 22.6% (95% confidence interval [CI], –6.8% to 20.5%; P = .34).

Absolute volume loss was greater with CDT than with compression sleeves (250 vs 143 mL; 95% CI, 13 to 203; P = .03). However, there was no difference between groups in the proportion of patients who lost 50% or more of their excess arm volume.

In addition, quality of life, measured with the Short Form-36 Health Survey, and arm function were similar in the 2 groups.

"I would like for patients and caregivers to recognize that massage-based treatments should not be the first line of treatment, which I think has been the case," Dr. Dayes noted.

"Despite the fact that a couple of previous randomized trials showed a lack of benefit, people were still recommending massage-based treatments for patients with lymphedema," he told Medscape Medical News. "I think it's probably in the patient's best interest to realize that the benefit really wasn't there, or rather that the benefit is no greater, or marginally greater, than an elastic sleeve. In addition, those women didn't have to go for daily massage and bandaging for 4 weeks in a row."

Resistant Lymphedema: A Different Story

This study does not address more advanced disease, nor does it address disease that has failed first-line therapy, Dr. Anderson emphasized.

"It would be quite logical to use CDT as second-line treatment for resistant lymphedema," he said.

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Dr. Anderson, who is a breast surgeon, explained that lymphedema has become a major concern because it has been neglected for so long.

"In the 1980s, we surgeons really didn't pay attention to lymphedema because we thought it was incurable. In those days, when complete axillary lymph node dissection was the only option, and when physical therapy techniques were not well accepted or established, we largely ignored this problem," he said.

"It was the patient community that raised awareness that there are things that can be done, and they can be effective," Dr. Anderson pointed out. "The fact that people are concerned about this, in part, has to do with the fact that we did not do a good job in the past. We're doing much better in terms of paying attention and trying to identify the best treatment strategies. I think this research into the best treatment is part of our trying to correct that."

Dr. Dayes and Dr. Anderson have disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

Comments

  • Binney4
    Binney4 Member Posts: 8,609
    edited September 2013

    Here's why this is a DISASTER for us patients:

    Our oncologists are going to skim this article in their Journal of Clinical Oncology, and instead of sending us to a therapist, they'll send us downstairs to the hospital boutique to buy ourselves a sleeve from some poorly-trained fitter who's trying to get rid of whatever stock she has on hand.

    No access to a therapist for proper fit.

    No help learning self-MLD or wrapping so we can cope with flares.

    No expert to call or email when we hit a crisis in our self-care.

    No way to be measured and watched, over time, to assure that our self-care is effective and that our condition is not progressing.

    And once the insurance companies get a hold of it they'll be all over it, making us jump every hurdle they can set up to prove that we are "women with advanced disease who have longer-standing, more extensive, or progressive" lymphedema, nevermind what these people have to say about itFrown.

    I would love to know what's behind this push to give us lymphedema patients even less care than we're receiving now. All without bothering to educate our doctors about our very real needs. I'm doing everything I can think of to research this and find out what the bias is and where it came from. In a very real sense it doesn't matter that this study had such a small sample, followed for such a short time, and that the interpretation leaves out more than it includes--we're all going to feel the consequences in the care we receive, and it ain't gonna be pretty.

    Binney, really sadFrownFrownFrown

  • ktym
    ktym Member Posts: 2,637
    edited September 2013

    That was exactly my thought too Binney

  • Marple
    Marple Member Posts: 19,143
    edited September 2013

    What a shame.  It's not like our provincial health insurance covers lymphatic massage anyway but I'm embarrassed to see this study coming out of Canada, my own province of all places.  Embarassed   

  • kira66715
    kira66715 Member Posts: 4,681
    edited September 2013

    I had heard from the Vodder School that there was a movement to prove that CDT/MLD was useless. And they're based in Canada.

    It's like how the weight lifting study was used to tell women who swelled to go home and weight lift. And with all the changes in health care, a new study like this, might easily be used to deny treatment coverage.

    I think, as we've all noted before, that if you have a bias it easily shows up in the research, and this research is garbage. But not total garbage, as it is an RCT, but few patients and short f/u and unfortunately, the study concluded that longer standing LE, when irreversible tissue changes have occurred, would need CDT.

  • Binney4
    Binney4 Member Posts: 8,609
    edited September 2013

    RCT = Randomized Controled Trial

    f/u = follow up

    Smile

    In other words, it's a well conducted study, published in a well-respected peer-reviewed medical journal, despite the low number of patients and the short follow up, so it will be taken as strong evidence by our doctors.

    I can't help noting that one of the functions of the therapy period is educating us in the workings of the lymph system, standard self-care measures, and the more intensive skills (wrapping, self MLD, etc.) needed when we experience a flare. Or when we travel. Or when we exercise. Or when the weather changes. Or when our kids are sick and we overdo it. Or...

    In other words, what they're ignoring (no surprise there!Undecided) is that we're dealing with a chronic disease that we will have to self-manage for life, and the help they're suggesting is to pop in and see an under-trained fitter and get ourselves a sleeve (not even a glove or gauntlet). Good luck and good-bye.

    Something like handing a newly diagnosed diabetes patient a bottle of insulin and telling them to go ahead and use it.

    Hmmm, does it seem perhaps I'm a bit ANGRY!!!!
    Binney, steamed

  • hugz4u
    hugz4u Member Posts: 2,781
    edited September 2013

    But can't you have a sudden flare with early LE and need the CDT? I know I am mild LE but with this info and if my medical team was not LE educated they may not recommend any kind of treatment. Well... maybe send me to the corner store for Twinkies, Bubble gum,oh and a sleeve.

    One thing is in my Province, Medical Services doesn't pay for any MLD, CDT. My insurance company gives me about 150 bucks a year total for my treatment and then I am out the door until I pay myself. I doubt my insurance company will bother me because I cant submit for much payment (150 dollarsyearly for massage) but now they are really going to take this study to the cleaners and never even think about covering anyone in the future. Bummer... take 2 giant steps backwards, go directly to the drive thru and get your one size sleeve that fits all from the uneducated medical staff.Yikes is it going to be this way?

    edited. Binney;Saw your post after mine was sent. You need chocolate anything right now. I just had some now to steady my nerves.

  • Marple
    Marple Member Posts: 19,143
    edited September 2013

    Hugz, you took the words right out of my keyboard........."take two giant steps backwards". 

  • KS1
    KS1 Member Posts: 632
    edited September 2013

    Haven't read the article yet, just the summary.  That said, a few things stand out.  First, in one of the two measures that were specifically reported,  the CDT group did significantly better than the compression only group:

    "Absolute volume loss was greater with CDT than with compression sleeves (250 vs 143 mL; 95% CI, 13 to 203; P = .03). "

    In the other measure, the CDT group had better outcome, though the difference wasn't significant:

    "The mean reduction in excess arm volume with CDT was 29.0% and with compression sleeves was 22.6% (95% confidence interval [CI], –6.8% to 20.5%; P = .34)"

    Given the huge - and significant - difference in absolute volume reduction, the lack of significant difference in mean reduction may reflect small sample size.  

    KS1

  • sushanna1
    sushanna1 Member Posts: 764
    edited September 2013

    Kira--Many thanks for posting.

    Binney--Double thanks for your comments.  Sigh.  What next?  All I can say is that CDT worked for me.  

    Sue

  • bhd1
    bhd1 Member Posts: 3,874
    edited September 2013

    I also worry that le is going to be taken even less seriously than it already is. My insurance will pay for a wig, but will they pay for a night vest? I am waiting to find out!!

  • kira66715
    kira66715 Member Posts: 4,681
    edited October 2013


    Great critque of a horrible study:http://torontophysiotherapy.ca/rehab-science-blog/is-manual-lymphatic-drainage-a-cost-effective-treatment-for-early-lymphedema/

    Is manual lymphatic drainage a cost-effective treatment for early lymphedema?


    Posted on by Lindsay Davey


    Manual lymphatic drainage is a central tenant of Complex (Combined) Decongestive Therapy, the standard treatment for the chronic swelling condition known as lymphedema. While the benefits of manual lymphatic drainage are well recognized for cases of longstanding lymphedema, does it provide enough benefit for early cases to warrant the added cost to patients? New research sheds new light on the debate.


    Early studies of lymphedema showed that when manual lymphatic drainage massage (MLD) was included as part of Complex (Combined) Decongestive Therapy (CDT) it resulted in a substantial additional decrease in swelling (ref 1). However, a more recent meta-analysis of 5 randomized controlled trials (a robust experimental methodology), suggests that the benefits MLD may be much more modest, albeit still statistically significant (ref 2). While MLD is a safe practice without known side effects, it is important to consider how much additional benefit is derived from incorporating MLD into treatment, and compare this to the added cost. The studies to date have not been sufficiently large enough, nor designed effectively enough, to draw strong conclusions.


    A new Canadian study published last week sheds further light on this issue. The randomized controlled trial was designed to evaluate the benefit of manual lymphatic drainage as part of CDT for the treatment of lymphedema secondary to breast cancer (ref 3). This study improves on previous randomized controlled trials by evaluating a greater number of patients (103 enrolled, 95 completed), across multiple health centers (six). The study compared CDT (comprised of manual lymphatic drainage, compression, education, exercise and skin care) with and without the MLD component, evaluating arm volume, function and quality of life immediately following treatment, as well as at 12, 24 and 52 weeks post-treatment.


    The authors concluded that, in contrast with previous studies, they were “unable to demonstrate a significant improvement in lymphedema with decongestive therapy [CDT with MLD] compared with a more conservative approach [CDT without MLD]”. This study was published alongside an opinion piece by unrelated authors that was curiously titled: “Mounting Evidence Against Complex Decongestive Therapy As a First-Line Treatment for Early Lymphedema”, and that cites these results and some of the other earlier randomized controlled trials as evidence that MLD (and not CDT as the title suggested) may not be a cost-effective strategy of first-line care for patients with early lymphedema compared with “conservative” practices (namely CDT without MLD).

    So what does the data actually say about manual lymphatic drainage?


    The latest study had enough patients enrolled to be able to detect a 20% or greater difference in percent arm volume reduction between the test groups with statistical confidence. Their data showed a 6% improvement in arm volume levels in favour of MLD, but accordingly this was deemed to be statistically insignificant. The authors state that a larger study size may show that the 6% difference is in fact statistically valid.


    However, when the authors examined absolute volume reduction rather than volume reduction as a percentage of initial baseline volume, the benefit of adding MLD was found to be both larger and statistically significant (250ml vs 143ml of volume reduction). The reliability of this result was questioned by the authors since, by chance, the women in the MLD group had on average a larger excess baseline volume (750ml vs 624ml) than those in the control group, and so they had the potential to lose more. Although this may be a rational argument, it may also be overly simplistic: a previous study showed that patients with more mild swelling actually respond better to treatment than those with more moderate swelling (see our blog post), and hence it is possible that the small benefit of manual lymphatic drainage observed in the current study may actually be greater than what was reported. Unfortunately, when the authors attempted to use two different statistical methods to remove the excess baseline arm volume difference from the analysis they got conflicting results as to whether the resulting absolute difference was in fact still statistically significant. The authors further point out that the best measure of treatment outcomes (percentage volume or absolute volume) has not been established.


    Assuming the benefit of MLD is statistically valid, it is unclear whether such differences impact patient function and/or quality of life. Participants did not report significant differences in symptoms or quality of life between the two groups over the time frame investigated. Interestingly, the authors did note that patients with lymphedema for more than one year tended to see greater benefit from CDT, although once again the study did not have sufficient statistical power to assess this trend. As the authors note, this observation supports the notion that longstanding lymphedema, in particular where fibrotic tissue has formed, may be less amenable to compression alone and may require the use of massage to help breakdown scar tissue (ref 4).

    So what is the take home message from this body of work?


    CDT with or without MLD provides a large and valuable benefit to patients with lymphedema. The incremental benefit of including manual lymphatic drainage is likely greater for patients with more longstanding, or advanced, cases of lymphedema, or for those who do not respond well to compression alone.


    Manual lymphatic drainage is demonstrated to be a safe technique without known side effects. The major concern with incorporating MLD into the treatment of patients with early cases of lymphedema (where the relative response may be the smallest), is the cost-benefit. Namely, is the added monetary cost of providing manual lymphatic drainage worth the potentially small improvement in limb volume in these patients? As the authors point out, the cost of incorporating MLD in their study was considerable ($1500 CDN), or $13/ml of additional volume reduction. The high cost of treatment was a result of the intensive treatment protocol used: MLD was provided in five one-hour sessions per week, for a total of four weeks. It is not clear why the authors chose this course of treatment. The effective amount of MLD to achieve limb reduction has not been adequately investigated, but a number of studies have shown significant reductions with much less intensive regimens (such as in ref 5 where an average reduction of over 50% was observed in 12 treatments), with the majority of volume reduction occurring within the first two weeks of treatment initiation. While a hard-nosed dissection of treatment cost is refreshing to see, in this case it is not particularly informative. The protocol used in this study would be considered by many practitioners including ourselves to be overkill for the vast majority of patients, and especially for those with early lymphedema.


    When evaluating the cost-benefit of MLD it is also important to consider the broader clinical context. While modest additional reductions in arm volume afforded by the addition of MLD to CDT for patients with early lymphedema may not have a significant impact on patient quality of life in the short term, it is worthwhile considering the progressive nature of this condition. Swelling causes cumulative damage to the lymphatic system and surrounding tissue, which exacerbates the underlying insufficiency. Having larger volumes of swelling for longer duration will cause proportionally greater damage, a downward spiral that leads to an advanced stage of lymphedema called “non-pitting lymphedema” where the swelling becomes firm and fibrotic. This advanced stage coincides with changes in tissue composition including a substantial increase in fat which can make CDT less effective, potentially necessitating more invasive procedures (see our blog post).


    When taking the available research into consideration, our (admittedly biased) opinion is that the current gold standard of care (CDT with MLD) remains a prudent strategy for cases of early lymphedema, and that the detection and treatment of early lymphedema is vital.


    Given the current context of health care funding in Canada, where patients pay out of pocket for lymphedema treatment, patients need to be well informed of their treatment options so that they can make the most effective use of their health care dollars. Patients should seek out CDT practitioners who are able explain the benefits of each treatment, and who will work with them to maximally attain their health goals within their budgets. In most cases much less intensive courses of MLD can be effective, and can be incorporated into sessions that provide additional therapy. In addition, patients should act proactively to decrease their risk of lymphedema in the first place (learn self-monitoring and preventative practices), and seek out CDT early on to prevent or delay progression. In one study it was reported that early intervention in mild cases could contain lymphedema at low levels for at least 10 years (ref 6). Finally, learning self-massage techniques (watch our lymphedema self-massage video) can allow patients incorporate some MLD into their daily lives at no added cost.



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