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Outcomes of patients discharged home with a chest tube after lung resection: a multicentre cohort study

Authors :
Fabrizio Minervini
Waël C. Hanna
Alessandro Brunelli
Forough Farrokhyar
Takuro Miyazaki
Luca Bertolaccini
Marco Scarci
Michal Coret
Kristen Hughes
Laura Schneider
Yessica Lopez-Hernandez
John Agzarian
Christian Finley
Yaron Shargall
Source :
Canadian Journal of Surgery. 65:E97-E103
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
CMA Impact Inc., 2022.

Abstract

Prolonged air leaks are increasingly treated in the outpatient setting, with patients discharged with chest tubes in place. We evaluated the incidence and risk factors associated with readmission, empyema development and further interventions in this patient population.We undertook a retrospective cohort analysis of all patients from 4 tertiary academic centres (January 2014 to December 2017) who were discharged home with a chest tube after lung resection for a postoperative air leak lasting more than 5 days. We analyzed demographics, patient factors, surgical details, hospital readmission, reintervention, antibiotics at discharge, empyema and death.Overall, 253 of 2794 patients were analyzed (9.0% of all resections), including 30 of 759 from centre 1 (4.0%), 67 of 857 from centre 2 (7.8%), 9 of 247 from centre 3 (3.6%) and 147 of 931 from centre 4 (15.8%) (Discharge with chest tube after lung resection is associated with serious adverse events. Given the high risk of empyema development, removal of chest tubes should be considered, when appropriate, within 20 days of surgery. Our data suggest a potential need for proactive postdischarge outpatient management programs to diminish risk of morbidity and death.

Details

ISSN :
14882310 and 0008428X
Volume :
65
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Canadian Journal of Surgery
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....f626a446d248bcce15d56bd9a583cac8