| Literature DB >> 31277134 |
Weipeng Yan1, Xiaofang Guo1, Jing Zhang2, Junfen Zhou1, Changchun Chen1, Manxiang Wang3, Zhaoxi Zhang1, Yulin Liu1.
Abstract
Pneumothorax is a common complication in computed tomography (CT)-guided percutaneous lung biopsy (CPLB). Whether the lobar location of lesions contributes to the incidence of pneumothorax should be further clarified.A total of 1452 consecutive patients who underwent CPLB between January 2010 and March 2018 were retrospectively analyzed. The incidence of pneumothorax was compared among 5 different lobe biopsies. Minor pneumothorax was defined as pneumothorax without chest tube placement and major pneumothorax was defined as pneumothorax with chest tube placement.The positive diagnosis rate of pathology for this cohort was approximately 84%, with 22.5% (326/1452) of the patients experiencing pneumothorax. The rates of pneumothorax were 19.5%, 24.5%, 33.9%, 21.4%, and 23.9% for the right upper lobe, right lower lobe, right middle lobe, left upper lobe, and left lower lobe, respectively (P = .09). Chest tube placement was necessary in 19.0% (62/326) of the patients with pneumothorax. The rates of major pneumothorax were 5.3%, 2.6%, 10.2%, 4.7%, and 2.6% for the right upper lobe, right lower lobe, right middle lobe, left upper lobe, and left lower lobe biopsies, respectively (P = .02). This result was further confirmed by the propensity score-matching method. Moreover, 8.7% (127/1452) of the patients experienced puncture of fissure, the rates of which were 13.5%, 5%, 10.2%, 9.1%, and 4.3% for the right upper lobe, right lower lobe, right middle lobe, left upper lobe, and left lower lobe, respectively (P < .001). Within the pneumothorax patient group, the rate of lobe fissure puncture (15.2%) was significantly lower in patients with minor pneumothorax than (51.6%) in those with major pneumothorax (P < .001).Upper and middle lobe lesion biopsies show a significantly high rate of major pneumothorax, which may be due to more puncture of fissure. It is crucial to carefully distinguish the fissure around lesions and bypass it to avoid major pneumothorax.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31277134 PMCID: PMC6635229 DOI: 10.1097/MD.0000000000016224
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Medicine (Baltimore) ISSN: 0025-7974 Impact factor: 1.817
Figure 1Final pathologic results in 1452 patients with computed tomography-guided percutaneous lung biopsy.
Baseline characteristics of 1452 patients.
Comparison of chest drainage events in patients with pneumothorax according to lesion localization.
Comparison of chest drainage events in the pneumothorax subgroup with or without puncture of lobe fissure.
Figure 2Lung squamous cell carcinoma in a 62-year-old man that was diagnosed with computed tomography (CT)-guided percutaneous lung biopsy. (A) Preprocedural CT scan showed a 2.0 cm (short diameter) solid nodule with a puncture depth of 4.1 cm in the right upper lobe in prone position. This nodule was adjacent to the oblique fissure (short arrows). (B) The puncture access point was on the posterior axillary line instead of the paravertebral area to avert the oblique fissure. The CT scan obtained during the biopsy showed that the needle tip punctured in the edge portion of the solid nodule, and 1 piece of tissue specimen was obtained with 1 biopsy. Unexpectedly, the puncture route still involved the oblique fissure (long arrows). (C) CT scan obtained after the biopsy showed obvious oblique fissure (hollow arrow) and pneumothorax. (D) The patient began to feel shortness of breath 1 hour after the procedure. Progressive pneumothorax was confirmed by about 60% compression of right lung volume on an emergent chest X-ray examination. (E) The chest tube was inserted into the right pleural cavity of this patient, significantly alleviating his symptoms. After 3 days of drainage, the 2nd X-ray showed that the right lung was completely re-expanded. (F) The squamous carcinoma cells were found in a cluster of necrotic cells with smear cytology of this biopsy tissue. (G) The squamous cell carcinoma of lung was diagnosed by the corresponding histopathology. IHC: CK5/6 (+), P40 (+), CK7 (+), TTF-1 (−), NapsinA (−), CD56 (−), Syn (−), CgA (+), Ki-67 (Li: 80%).
Comparison of pneumothorax in patients with different puncture positions.
Correlation between pneumothorax and lung hemorrhage complication.