Acute and chronic pleural complications in lung transplantation
- PMID: 14585383
- DOI: 10.1016/s1053-2498(02)01230-5
Acute and chronic pleural complications in lung transplantation
Abstract
Background: Lung transplant recipients may have pleural complications. However, the influence of these complications on the prognosis is not well known.
Methods: We analyzed pleural complications and clinical and radiologic data from 100 patients who underwent lung transplantation in a general hospital in a 9-year period. Pre-operative evaluation, surgical protocol, immunosuppressive regimen, and follow-up were carried out systematically. Chest computerized tomography (CT) was performed at 3 and 12 months after transplantation.
Results: All patients had early post-operative pleural effusion ipsilateral to the graft, which required drainage for a mean of 19.3 days (range, 5-52 days). Thirty-four patients had 43 acute pleural complications: 15 hemothoraxes, 10 persistent air leaks, 8 pneumothoraxes, 7 transient air leaks, and 3 empyemas. Multivariate analysis showed hemothorax and persistent air leak were associated with increased post-operative mortality (p = 0.024, p = 0.011, respectively). Post-operative mortality was not associated with any pre-transplant variable. Chest CT findings at 3 months revealed > or =1 pleural alteration in 58 of 70 patients (83%): 34 post-operative residual ipsilateral pleural effusions; 36 pleural thickenings; and 3 residual pneumothoraxes, 1 with a coexisting bronchial dehiscence. Chest CT at 12 months showed pleural alterations in 50 of 58 patients (86%): pleural thickening in 48, calcification in 4, and residual pleural effusion in 4.
Conclusions: Pleural complications are common in lung transplant recipients. Hemothorax and persistent air leak are associated with increased post-operative mortality. Chest CT showed pleural alterations in most patients 12 months after transplantation.