VATS Decortication Versus IR Guided Chest Tube Insertion With Fibrinolytics for the Management of...
EmpyemaPleuralThe American Association of Thoracic Surgery defines empyema as pus in the pleural space. It is a common thoracic surgery presentation with an estimated 65,000 cases occurring annually in the United States. Despite the high prevalence of empyemas, there has been no consensus as to its optimal first line management. Methods of acceptable treatment currently include chest tube insertion (thoracostomy), thoracostomy with fibrinolytics, decortication via a thoracotomy (removal of fibrous peel on the lung) and video-assisted thoracoscopic surgery (VATS) decortication. The investigators aim to determine the rate of re-intervention within thirty days for adults presenting with empyema in the fibrinopurulent phase by comparing the initial treatments of Interventional Radiology (IR) guided chest tube insertion with intrapleural fibrinolytics (as per Multi-Institutional Sepsis 2 Trial; MIST 2 Trial) versus VATS decortication. Currently, either of these treatments is considered first-line depending on the surgeon and institutional preference.
Trial of Antiseptic Irrigation for Pleural Infection
EmpyemaPleuralPleural antiseptic irrigation (PAI) is used in conjunction with open drainage for treating adults with chronic post-thoracotomy empyema. The antiseptic povidone-iodine can safely be instilled into the pleural cavity for the purpose of pleurodesis and has recently been described for pleural irrigation in the acute management of paediatric pleural infection with good outcomes. A recent case report demonstrated the safe use of povidone-iodine pleural irrigation in a patient with complex pleural empyema with successful medical management. In a previous pilot study, antiseptic irrigation led to less referral to surgery and shorter length of hospital stay in comparison to no irrigation. This study aims to investigate the effect of antiseptic pleural irrigation (using povidone iodine) on the inflammatory response in adults patients with pleural infection in comparison to irrigation with normal saline alone. A reduction in the systemic inflammatory response can be inferred to correlate with reduction in the infection burden in the pleural space.
VATS Surgery Compared to Drainage in the Treatment of Pleural Empyema
Pleural EmpyemaPleura empyema is a frequent disease with a high morbidity and a mortality rate of approximately 15%. Pleura empyema is characterized by the passage of three stages (I - III). The aim of treating the disease is to remove the infection and provide fully expansion of the lung. The initial treatment at the early stage of the disease (stage I) is simple drainage. In clinical practice, stages II and III are treated alike. Current standard treatment for these stages is drainage with ultrasound (ULS) -guided pigtail. Simultaneously with drainage, an intrapleural fibrinolyticum can be given. A potential better alternative is surgery in terms of Video Assisted Thoracoscopic Surgery (VATS). The theoretical advantage of early surgery is that patients undergo rapid, definitive treatment. Furthermore, surgery can ensure optimal drain placement. How best to treat these patients (drainage or surgery) is still under clinical evaluation and depends to a great extent on local clinical practice. It is only to a limited extent based on scientific evidence. The aim of this study is to determine if there is a difference in outcome in patients diagnosed with stage II and stage III empyema who either receive primary VATS surgery or ULS guided drainage and intrapleural therapy (fibrinolytic (altaplasm) with DNase (Pulmozyne ®)) The primary outcome is Hospitalization time and secondary outcomes is e.g. mortality, health related costs and quality of life. The present study can thus provide new and highly relevant knowledge as well as change the treatment of these patients, both nationally and internationally. It is planned that a total of 184 patients will be included in the project. The study takes place as a collaboration between all four thoracic surgical departments and the major pulmonary medicine departments in Denmark. In addition, the study has international collaborators/consultants who will provide counselling in connection with the study.
Comparison Between McGrath and Macintosh Laryngoscopes for DLT Intubation in Thoracic Surgery Patients....
Thoracic DiseasesThoracic Neoplasms1 moreThe goal of this RCT is to compare outcome with McGrath vs Macintosh laryngoscopes among patients undergoing thoracic surgery. The main questions it aims to answer are, Rate of successful intubation at first attempt and Time for intubation required with each device. Participants are required to sign the informed consent for, they will be placed in two groups, Group A: Macintosh (DL) Group B: McGrath (VL) Researchers will compare in Group A: Macintosh (DL) and Group B: McGrath (VL) the differences in rate of successful intubation at first attempt and time for intubation required with each device.
Pneumonia and Empyema in Emergency Departments in Children
PneumoniaPleural EffusionDescribe the epidemiology of hospitalized pediatric pneumonia and pneumonia with pleural effusion: frequency, clinical and biological characteristics, responsible bacteria and pneumococcus place, antibiotic resistance, treatment, vaccine status.
UNC Pleural Fluid Registry
Lung CancerLung Infection3 moreResearch with biospecimens such as blood, tissue, or body fluids can help researchers understand how the human body works. Researchers can make new tests to find diseases, understand how treatments work, or find new ways to treat a disease. The purpose of this study is to collect biospecimens for research from patients with known or suspected lung cancer. The information learned from the biospecimens may be used in future treatments. The purpose of this protocol is to create a pleural fluid registry for use in future studies.
Early Medical Thoracoscopy Versus Simple Chest Tube Drainage in Complicated Parapneumonic Effusion...
Complicated Parapneumonic EffusionPleural EmpyemaMulticenter, randomized controlled study to compare early mini-invasive thoracoscopy to simple chest tube drainage in complicated parapneumonic effusions or pleural empyema. 100 patients will be recruited. Follow-up will be 3 months. It will be looked at the rate medical cure, the need for secondary interventions, death and duration of hospital stay. In a nested trial in 20 patients the intrapleural pharmacokinetics of linezolid (approved antibiotic agent) will be measured.
Clinical Trial Corticoids For Empyema And Pleural Effusion In Children
Parapneumonic Pleural EffusionEmpyemaSTUDY JUSTIFICATION Scientific evidence of the usefulness of corticosteroid use for infectious diseases: Corticosteroids along with antibiotic use improve survival in some infectious processes provide long term benefits and improve symptoms in many others. Clinical Observation: the investigators observed that patients with parapneumonic pleural effusion and associated bronchospasm who were treated with corticosteroids for their bronchospasm, evolved to healing before patients who were not treated with corticosteroids (average admission days 10 vs. 17). Rationale: the anti-inflammatory effect has been the rationale for the use of dexamethasone as an inhibitor of the inflammatory response observed after the first dose of parenteral antibiotic in bacterial meningitis. A similar effect is likely to occur in pneumonia with pleural effusion. It can be therefore hypothesized that Dexamethasone could inhibit an excessive inflammatory response by mesothelial and inflammatory cells during the early phases of parapneumonic empyema, reducing its severity and hence its complications. OBJECTIVES Principal: to investigate if dexamethasone 0,25mg/kg q.i.d. added to standard antibiotic therapy reduces time to resolution of parapneumonic pleural effusion. Secondary: 2.1. Evaluate the effect of dexamethasone 0,25mg/kg q.i.d. added to standard antibiotic therapy on the development of complications during pleural effusion episode. 2.2. Evaluate the incidence of severe and non severe adverse events associated with the new treatment versus standard therapy. METHODS Study design: exploratory (pilot), randomized, double blinded, placebo controlled, parallel stratified design, multicentric. Participating Hospitals (n=56, 7 patients per center): Hospital Infanta Sofía (S. Sebastián de los Reyes, Madrid). Hospital Universitario de Getafe Hospital Universitario Ramón y Cajal, Madrid. Hospital Universitario Materno-Infantil Carlos Haya, Málaga. Hospital Infantil La Paz, Madrid. Hospital U. Gregorio Marañón Hospital U. Príncipe de Asturias Hospital Virgen de la Salud, Toledo Endpoints: 3.1. Primary: time to resolution. 3.2. Secondary endpoints: Effectiveness: number of children with complications. Safety (expected number: none). i) Hyperglycemia ii) Signs of gastrointestinal bleeding iii) Need of transfusion iv) Oropharyngeal Candidiasis v) Allergic reaction vi) Other adverse reactions described in the Medication Guide. Treatment arms: 3.1. Control (0) Normal saline 0,6 ml/kg, IV, q.i.d. for 2 days. Cefotaxime 150 mg/kg, IV, q.d. until discharge criteria are present. Ranitidine 5 mg/kg IV, q.d. for 2 days. Amoxicillin- Clavulanic acid 80mg/kg p.o., q.d. during 15 days. 3.2. Study treatment: (1) dexamethasone 0,25mg/kg, IV, q.i.d. for 2 days. Cefotaxime 150 mg/kg, IV, q.d. until discharge criteria are present Ranitidine 5 mg/kg IV, q.d. for 2 days Amoxicillin/Clavulanic acid orally (80mg/kg/day) during 15 days. 4. INCLUSION CRITERIA Patients between 1 and 14 year old. Presence of pneumonia diagnosed by clinical and radiographic criteria: cough, fever and radiological consolidation. Evidence of pleural effusion.
Short Duration High Intensity Intrapleural Alteplase With Pulmozyme in Pleural Infection Management...
Loculated EmpyemaThe aim of this study was to assess the efficacy of the modified regimen short duration intrapleural 16mg alteplase (Actilyse, Boehringer Ingelheim) with 5mg DNase (Pulmozyme Hoffmann-La Roche Ltd) in patients with pleural infection.
Efficacy and Security of Intrapleurally Alteplase vs Urokinase for the Treatment of Complicated...
EmpyemaPleural2 moreObjectives: Main objective: To evaluate the efficacy and safety of intrapleural alteplase vs urokinase in patients with complex complicated parapneumonic pleural effusion and empyema. To evaluate the pleural and plasmatic levels of the fibrinolytic system markers after the treatment with alteplase vs urokinase To evaluate the safety of alteplase in the treatment of complex complicated parapneumonic pleural effusion and empyema Design: Multicentric, randomized, parallel, controlled and double blind Main variable: Percentage of curation Study population and number of patients: 204 patients with complex complicated parapneumonic pleural effusions and empyema Duration of the treatment: Three days (main variable), and optional three days (secondary variable)