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. 2015 Oct 21;6(5):482–496. doi: 10.1055/s-0035-1564807

Table 6. Strength of findings in patients with metastatic breast cancer.

Finding Summary Modification Strength of evidence
Survival Hormone- and HER2-naïve patients have a statistically and temporally significant survival advantage over resistant receptor patients. Upgrade: large effect (source: nonsurgical studies, Sciubba et al1 study) Moderate
DFI and a greater degree of axillary lymph node invasion have a statistically and temporally significant negative impact on survival. Upgrade: large effect (source: large nonsurgical studies) Moderate
Single-modality postoperative adjuvant therapy (compared with dual therapy: radiation and chemotherapy) has a statistically and temporally significant negative impact on survival. Source: Zadnik et al4 only Low
Visceral metastasis, surgical complications, presence of other skeletal metastasis, presence of cervical metastasis, and age have a statistically and temporally significant negative impact on survival. Downgrade: inconsistent results across studies, for age different cutoffs are used (Sciubba et al1 vs. Zadnik et al4 vs. nonsurgical results) Insufficient
Pain outcome Surgery provides pain relief in over 75% of cases with preoperative pain. Based on 85 patients (see Table 3) Low
Cement augmentation procedures provide a high rate of pain relief (>90%). Downgrade: small sample size (19 patients) Insufficient
Neurologic outcome Surgery improves neurologic function in over 50% of cases with preoperative deficit. Upgrade: large effect (based on 168 patients) Moderate
Surgery treatment has ∼5% risk of neurologic deterioration. Upgrade: large effect (based on 169 patients) Moderate
Local tumor control Surgical resection results in local tumor control rates of >90% for up to 12 mo. Based on 129 patients Low

Note: High indicates majority of articles level I or II; low indicates majority of articles level III or IV. Upgrade means large effect or gradient response; downgrade means inconsistence, imprecision of effect, indirect evidence, publication bias.