| Literature DB >> 31341753 |
Samuel Jacob1, Axel Meneses2, Kevin Landolfo1, Magdy El-Sayed Ahmed1, Ian A Makey3, Si M Pham1, Mathew Thomas1.
Abstract
Background The objective of this study was to determine the incidence and outcomes of chylothorax after lung transplantation. Methods We conducted a retrospective review of our institutional lung transplant registry of 504 adult transplantations done from 2001 to 2015 and identified seven patients (1.38%) with chylothorax. Electronic health records were then analyzed to determine demographics, indications for surgery, management, and outcomes. Survival curves were plotted using the Kaplan-Meier method. Results Chylothorax presented in the first week in four (62.5%) patients, and approximately one month later in the remaining three. Nonsurgical management was initially attempted in all patients and succeeded in three (42.9%). Elective surgical ligation of the thoracic duct (LTD) was successful in two (66.7%) out of three patients in whom it was performed. One patient required emergent reoperation for clamshell thoracotomy dehiscence from severe chylothorax. Thoracic duct embolization was attempted but unsuccessful in two patients. Subsequently, one of these patients received a peritoneal-venous shunt and the other underwent LTD. Chylothorax permanently resolved in six patients (85.7%). There were no mortalities directly related to chylothorax. The median time to resolution was 11 days (range: 7-60). The mean survival in months for chylothorax patients was 29.2 (SE 3.1) and 78.2 (SE 2.9) for the remaining patients (p = 0.37). The median survival was not reached for the chylothorax group and was 71.8 months (95% CI: 58.0-83.9) for the rest. Conclusion Chylothorax is rare after lung transplantation but can lead to major comorbidities and prolonged hospital stay. In our experience, nonsurgical management was successful in up to 40% of patients. LTD should be considered in those who fail conservative management.Entities:
Keywords: chylothorax; complications; lung transplantation; management
Year: 2019 PMID: 31341753 PMCID: PMC6649881 DOI: 10.7759/cureus.5190
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cureus ISSN: 2168-8184
Patient demographics and characteristics of chylothorax
CPB, cardiopulmonary bypass; PLT, posterolateral thoracotomy; LAM, lymphangioleiomyomatosis
| Pt No. | Age | Sex | Diagnosis | Lung transplant type | Surgical approach | CPB | Side of chylothorax | Time from transplant to presentation (days) | Resolution time (days) | Survivalin months | Current survival status |
| 1 | 48 | M | Silicosis | Bilateral | Clamshell | No | Bilateral | 7 | 22 | 189 | Alive |
| 2 | 66 | F | Pulmonary Fibrosis | Unilateral [R] | PLT | Yes | Unilateral [R] | 35 | 14 | 31 | Deceased |
| 3 | 67 | M | Pulmonary Fibrosis | Bilateral (retransplant) | PLT | No | Bilateral | 30 | 7 | 17 | Deceased |
| 4 | 63 | M | Bronchiectasis | Bilateral | PLT | No | Unilateral [R] | 4 | 8 | 91 | Alive |
| 5 | 58 | M | Pulmonary Fibrosis | Bilateral | PLT | No | Unilateral [R] | 3 | 7 | 61 | Alive |
| 6 | 37 | F | LAM | Bilateral | Clamshell | Yes | Unilateral [R] | 6 | Unresolved | 27 | Alive |
| 7 | 44 | F | Pulmonary Fibrosis | Bilateral | PLT | Yes | Unilateral [R] | 35 | 60 | 18 | Alive |
Presentation, management, and outcomes of chylothorax
TPN, total parenteral nutrition; NPO, nil per os; LTD, ligation of thoracic duct
| Pt. No | Presentation | Diet | TPN? | Total TPN time | Octreotide? | Type(s) of intervention | Final status |
| 1 | Chylous chest tube drainage, acute clamshell thoracotomy wound dehiscence | Chylothorax diet before surgery; NPO followed by low fat diet after surgery | Yes | 14 | No | Reoperation with washout and repair of sternal dehiscence | Resolved |
| 2 | General weakness, malnutrition, pleural effusion | Non fat diet | No | N/A | Yes | Thoracentesis, Pigtail thoracic drain | Resolved |
| 3 | Extreme fatigue, anorexia, failure to thrive, pleural effusion | NPO then low fat diet | Yes | 15 | No | Bilateral pigtail thoracic drain | Resolved |
| 4 | Chylous chest tube drainage | NPO | Yes | 5 | Yes | LTD and oversewing of leak | Resolved |
| 5 | Chylous chest tube drainage | Chylothorax diet | No | NA | Yes | None | Resolved |
| 6 | Chylous chest tube drainage, Pericardial effusion, large volume pleural effusions, Denver shunt thrombus, empyema, chylous ascites | NPO then chylothorax diet | Yes | 23 | Yes | Attempted TD embolization; Surgery - LTD, pleurodesis, Denver shunt; paracentesis, multiple thoracentesis and drains | Persistent |
| 7 | Malnutrition, pleural effusion | Chylothorax diet then NPO; resumed chylothorax after surgery | Yes | 31 | Yes | Pigtail thoracic drain; attempted TD embolization; Surgery – LTD | Resolved |
Figure 1Algorithm for management of chylothorax
1Pleural fluid is sent for triglycerides and chylomicrons analysis if the clinical diagnosis is equivocal.
2When initial chylothorax output is low (<300 mL/24 hours), a non-fat or chylothorax diet trial can be trialed.
NPO, nil per os; TPN, total parenteral nutrition; MCT, medium-chain triglyceride; VATS, video-assisted thoracoscopic surgery