Methods: Between January 2006 and December 2008, the results of 208 operations performed on 190 patients with PSP were examined. As pleural adhesion procedures, 87 pleural abrasions (group A) [20 via video-assisted thoracic surgery (VATS); 67 via axillary thoracotomy (AT)] and 121 apical parietal pleurectomies (group P) (34 via VATS; 87 via AT) were performed. The patients in groups A and P were followed up for a median of 46 (range 28-63) and 41 (range 28-63) months, respectively. They were monitored for recurrence, and, if present, the factors affecting the recurrence were then analyzed.
Results: No differences between the groups were found with respect to age, pneumothorax side, surgical indications, surgical approach, duration of surgery, or complication development. The chest tube duration and hospitalization time were significantly shorter in group P (p=0.0001 and p=0.002, respectively). Recurrence developed in six patients (6.8%) in group A and one patient (0.8%) in group P (p=0.02). In the univariate analysis, no relationship was found between the rate of recurrence and the surgical approach, age, gender, pneumothorax side, or surgical indication. In the logistic regression analysis, the surgical approach and pleural adhesion procedure were independent predictors of recurrence (p=0.048 and p=0.034, respectively).
Conclusion: A pleurectomy is more effective than abrasion at preventing postoperative recurrence in PSP surgery. Additionally, it has advantages in terms of chest tube duration and hospitalization time.
Patients who developed PSP are usually treated with a tube thoracostomy. Indications for surgical treatment for first-episode pneumothorax patients include prolonged air leak (PAL), incomplete lung reexpansion, a background of a high-risk occupational group, recurrence, and sequential or synchronous bilateral pneumothorax.[2,4]
The purpose of the surgical treatment of PSP is to resect the apical bulla and bleb areas. In addition, various pleural adhesion procedures are recommended to prevent recurrence. To this end, the pleura can be abraded using mechanical, chemical (talc), or physical (laser, electrocautery, or diathermy) methods, or a pleurectomy can be performed.[5-11]
This study compared the efficiency of pleural abrasion and pleurectomy methods in reducing recurrence in patients undergoing a wedge resection of the lung due to PSP.
The indications for surgery were recurrent pneumothorax (n=103), sequential bilateral pneumothorax (n=62), and prolonged air leak (PAL) (n=43). A pneumothorax was deemed “recurrent” when it occurred on the same side where one had previously been detected and was “sequential bilateral” when it developed in the opposite hemithorax from where a pneumorax had been seen before. In the patients with PSP who were treated with a tube thoracostomy, persistent air leakage from the drain for at least five days was defined as PAL.
Fifty-four operations were performed with videoassisted thoracic surgery (VATS), and 154 with an axillary thoracotomy approach. The VATS operations were done using double-lumen intubation. Three 11.5-mm-diameter ports were used. One was inserted in the seventh intercostal space in the mid-axillary line for the endocamera, and the other two ports were inserted at the anterior and posterior axillary folds in the fourth or fifth intercostal space for the endoscopic instruments. A zero-degree video thoracoscope (Karl Storz; Tuttlingen, Germany) was used as a standard, with a 30-degree video thoracoscope on standby if needed. The axillary thoracotomies were performed with a standard approach using an approximately 8 cm incision over the axillary area with double-lumen intubation. The thorax was entered through the third or fourth intercostal space. All of the operations were completed successfully with no intraoperative complications, and it was not necessary to enlarge the incision in the axillary thoracotomy or to convert the VATS to an open thoracotomy.
In all patients, the areas in the upper lobes with bullae/blebs were identified, and these areas were resected (wedge resection) using a stapler (Endo-GIA or GIA stapler, Covidien, Mansfield, Massachusetts, USA). Tissue adhesive was not used with any patient. The pleural adhesion procedure used was pleural abrasion in 87 patients (group A) and parietal pleurectomy in 121 patients (group P).
The extent of the removed parietal pleura was varied, but the maximum area where the pleurectomy was from the fourth intercostal space to the apical area and to the internal mammary artery anteriorly and the sympathetic chain posteriorly. The surgeons who performed the pleurectomy held the pleura with a clamp, dissected it from the endothoracic fascia, and removed the incised pleura. In the patients for whom abrasion was performed, surgical gauze attached over a clamp was used to produce vigorous pleural abrasion that caused uniform oozing from the pleura. There was no patient pleurectomy and pleural abrasion were performed together. In both approaches, a thorax tube was inserted at the end of the operation, and all patients were extubated in the operating room.
Suction (–10 cm H2O) was applied to all chest tubes for the first 24 postoperative hours, and the chest tube was removed 24 hours after full expansion had been achieved and the leak had resolved. Any complications that developed postoperatively, the resulting treatment, and the total durations of the chest tube insertion and hospitalization were recorded.
After discharge, all patients were routinely followed up on days seven and 30 with a physical examination and chest X-ray. In addition, all patients were called by phone asked to report any signs of recurrence or complications.
The data was analyzed using the Statistical Package for the Social Sciences (SPSS, Inc., Chicago, Illinois, USA). Student’s t-test was used to compare the averages, the Mann-Whitney U-test was used to compare medians, and a chi-square test or Fisher’s exact test was used to compare the frequencies. Variables that differed at the p≤0.1 level were included in the multivariate analysis, and p<0.05 was considered significant.
The median duration of chest tube insertion was four (range 2-12) and two (range 2-14) days for the patients in groups A and P, respectively (p=0.0001).
No mortality occurred in either group. Complications developed in 14 patients (16%) from group A and 18 patients (14.8%) from group P (p=0.85). In group A, the most frequent complications were prolonged air leak (PAL) (n=9) and wound infection (n=2). Repeat surgery was required in one patient who developed PAL and in one patient who developed empyema (2.2%). In group P, the most frequent complications were PAL (n=12) and hematoma (n=4). Repeat surgery was required in three patients who developed PAL and three patients who developed hematoma (4.9%). The groups showed no statistical difference in the rate of complications which required another operation (p=0.85). The rate of postoperative pleural hematoma development was slightly higher in group P than in group A (3.3% versus 1.1%), but this difference was not significant (p=0.4).
The patients in group A were hospitalized for a median of four (range 2-22) days versus a median of three (range 2-24) days in group P (p=0.002).
The patients in group A were followed for a median of 46 (range 28-63) months versus 41 (range 28-63) months for group P. During the follow-up period, pneumothoraces recurred in seven patients. No relationship was found between recurrence and age (p=0.6), pneumothorax side (p=0.97), or surgical indication (p=0.33). The rate of recurrence in the patients undergoing VATS and an axillary thoracotomy was 7.4% (4/54) and 1.9% (3/154), respectively (p=0.07). Six of the patients who developed recurrence were in group A (6.8% of the patients in this group), and only one group P patient developed recurrence (0.8% of the patients in this group). The low recurrence rate in group P compared with that in group A was statistically significant (p=0.02). Factors that affected recurrence development were analyzed using multivariate analysis. The gender, surgical approach, and pleural adhesion method were included in the logistic regression analysis. The effect of gender was not significant (p=0.2), whereas the surgical approach (p=0.048) and pleural adhesion procedure (VATS over axillary thoracotomy) (p=0.034) were independent predictors of recurrence.
Early postoperative results were another factor in our study in favor of pleurectomies. In group P, both the durations of the chest tube and hospitalization were shorter than in group A. This was an unexpected finding because pleural abrasion is a less invasive procedure than a pleurectomy, and more fluid-blood drainage can usually be expected after a pleurectomy. However we found that hemorrhagic complications were slightly more frequent after a pleurectomy. Air leak resolved quickly after the pleurectomy procedure, probably due to either the occurrence of stronger inflammation when compared with pleural abrasion or the covering of the parenchymal resection line by a blood clot. This led to early chest tube removal and an early discharge.
According to our results, our conclusion is that both early (chest tube duration and hospitalization time) and late (recurrence) results of pleurectomies are superior to those of abrasion in PSP surgery.
We also found that the recurrence risk was higher in patients operated on with the VATS approach and that type of surgical approach can affect the recurrence rate after PSP surgery. Many studies have indicated that there is a high recurrence rate with the VATS approach is used.[13-15] One of the factors leading to this difference may be that VATS is usually more limited and that abrasion is the preferred pleural adhesion method. Nevertheless, in our series, similar numbers of patients underwent abrasion and pleurectomy in the VATS and thoracotomy groups, and the negative effect of the VATS approach on the recurrence rate persisted in the multivariate analysis. Therefore, the increased recurrence rate in the patients treated with VATS was a direct result of the limitations of VATS and did not arise from the avoidance of a pleurectomy.
In conclusion, we believe that a pleurectomy is the preferred pleural adhesion method in the surgical treatment of PSP.
Declaration of conflicting interests
The authors declared no conflicts of interest with respect
to the authorship and/or publication of this article.
Funding
The authors received no financial support for the
research and/or authorship of this article.
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