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Randomised trial of indwelling pleural catheters for refractory transudative pleural effusions

Authors :
Rehan Mustafa
M Haris
David T Arnold
Jurgen Herre
Alina Ionescu
Benjamin Prudon
Thapas Nagarajan
Matthew Evison
Alex West
Oliver J Bintcliffe
Robert F. Miller
Nick A Maskell
Najib M. Rahman
Louise Stadon
Emma Keenan
Steven Walker
Rahul Bhatnagar
Anur Guhan
Brennan C Kahan
Source :
Walker, S P, Bintcliffe, O, Keenan, E, Stadon, L, Evison, M, Haris, M, Nagarajan, T, West, A, Ionescu, A, Prudon, B, Guhan, A, Mustafa, R, Herre, J, Arnold, D, Bhatnagar, R, Kahan, B, Miller, R F, Rahman, N M & Maskell, N A 2021, ' Randomised trial of indwelling pleural catheters for refractory transudative pleural effusions ', The European respiratory journal . https://doi.org/10.1183/13993003.01362-2021
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

ObjectiveRefractory symptomatic transudative pleural effusions are an indication for pleural drainage. There has been supportive observational evidence for the use of indwelling pleural catheters (IPCs) for transudative effusions, but no randomised trials. We aimed to investigate the effect of IPCs on breathlessness in patients with transudative pleural effusions when compared with standard care.MethodsA multicentre randomised controlled trial, in which patients with transudative pleural effusions were randomly assigned to either an IPC (intervention) or therapeutic thoracentesis (TT; standard care). The primary outcome was mean daily breathlessness score over 12 weeks from randomisation.Results220 patients were screened from April 2015 to August 2019 across 13 centres, with 33 randomised to intervention (IPC) and 35 to standard care (TT). Underlying aetiology was heart failure in 46 patients, liver failure in 16 and renal failure in six. In primary outcome analysis, the mean±sd breathlessness score over the 12-week study period was 39.7±29.4 mm in the IPC group and 45.0±26.1 mm in the TT group (p=0.67). Secondary outcomes analysis demonstrated that mean±sd drainage was 17 412±17 936 mL and 2901±2416 mL in the IPC and TT groups, respectively. A greater proportion of patients had at least one adverse event in the IPC group (p=0.04).ConclusionWe found no significant difference in breathlessness over 12 weeks between IPCs or TT. TT is associated with fewer complications and IPCs reduced the number of invasive pleural procedures required. Patient preference and circumstances should be considered in selecting the intervention in this cohort.

Details

ISSN :
13993003
Volume :
59
Issue :
2
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The European respiratory journal
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....9cbb03562ee6b62c660161016cc5cab0
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1183/13993003.01362-2021