| Literature DB >> 34362373 |
Jung Han Hwang1, Jeong Ho Kim2, Suyoung Park1, Ki Hyun Lee1, So Hyun Park1.
Abstract
PURPOSE: To evaluate the safety, efficacy, and long-term outcome of bronchial artery embolization (BAE) in the treatment of non-massive hemoptysis and the prognostic factors associated with recurrent bleeding.Entities:
Keywords: Bronchial artery; Bronchoscopy; Contrast-enhanced CT; Embolization; Hemoptysis
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34362373 PMCID: PMC8344225 DOI: 10.1186/s12931-021-01820-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Respir Res ISSN: 1465-9921
Demographic data of 233 patients with non-massive hemoptysis
| Characteristic | Value ( |
|---|---|
| Age (years) | 56.9 ± 14.8 |
| Sex (male/female) | 143/90 |
| Underlying disease | |
| DM/HTN | 17/34 |
| Causes of non-massive hemoptysis | |
| TB sequelae | 99 (42.5) |
| Bronchiectasis | 31 (13.2) |
| Tuberculosis destroyed lung | 25 (10.9) |
| Aspergilloma | 26 (11.1) |
| Fibrotic scar change | 17 (7.3) |
| Active TB | 31 (13.2) |
| Mycobacterium tuberculosis | 28 (11.9) |
| Multidrug-resistant tuberculosis | 3 (1.3) |
| Nontuberculous mycobacteria | 8 (3.3) |
| Bronchiectasis without TB | 35 (15.2) |
| Pneumonia | 27 (11.6) |
| Lung cancer | 11 (4.6) |
| Others | 22 (9.6) |
| Amount of hemoptysis (mL) | |
| < 50 | 92 (39.5) |
| 50–100 | 81 (34.7) |
| 101–200 | 57 (24.5) |
| 201–300 | 3 (1.3) |
| Pre-procedural evaluationa | |
| Contrast-enhanced CT + Bronchoscopy | 147 (63.1%) |
| Contrast-enhanced CT | 72 (31.0%) |
| Bronchoscopy | 3 (1.2%) |
| None | 11 (4.7%) |
| In-hospital mortality | |
| Yesb | 5 (2.1) |
| No | 228 (97.9) |
Values in parentheses represent percentages. aContrast-enhanced chest CT and bronchoscopy were performed within 3 months before BAE. bFive patients died following complications of underlying diseases (heart failure, 3 patients; multiorgan failure, 2 patients). CT, computed tomography, DM, diabetes mellitus, HTN, hypertension, TB, tuberculosis
Characteristics and outcomes of BAE
Data in parentheses represent percentages. *Negative findings on initial angiography. †Diagnostic angiography to verify bleeding focus at initial session of bronchial artery embolization. **Overlapping findings. ††Microcoil used for proximal embolization of target artery in some patient. PVA, polyvinyl alcohol; NBCA, N-butyl-2-cyanoacrylate; BA, bronchial artery; AbBA, aberrant bronchial artery, NBSC, non-bronchial systemic collaterals
Fig. 1Diagram showing clinical flow of 233 patients referred for BAE
Fig. 2A 65-year-old male patient with known tuberculosis and prior right-upper lobe lung wedge resection now presenting with aspergillosis and hemoptysis. Preprocedural contrast-enhanced chest CT scans show a hypertrophic change of (A) left bronchial artery (white arrow), B right bronchial artery (gray arrow), and C aberrant left bronchial artery form left vertebral artery (arrowhead). Selective bronchial angiograms show hypertrophic change in (D) left bronchial artery, E right bronchial artery, and F aberrant left bronchial artery form left vertebral artery with hyperemic strains. The pre-procedural CT is consistent with the angiography findings. All hypertrophic arteries were embolized with the use of PVA and NBCA. Postembolization angiography shows no residual bleeding foci. The patient was uneventful during the follow-up period (2365 days)
Characteristics of nine patients with technical failure
| Patient | Details of embolized arteries | Technical outcome | Clinical outcome |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Right bronchial artery | Success | No clinical improvement, surgically treateda |
| Left bronchial artery | Failure (selection failure) | ||
| 2 | Right bronchial artery | Success | Improved, recurred |
| Intercostal artery | Success | ||
| Left bronchial artery | Failure (selection failure) | ||
| 3 | Both bronchial arteries | Success | Improved |
| Intercostal artery | Failure (selection failure) | ||
| 4 | Right bronchial artery | Success | Improved |
| Left bronchial artery | Failure (selection failure) | ||
| 5 | Both bronchial arteries | Success | Improved, recurred |
| Right internal mammary artery | Failure (selection failure) | ||
| 6 | Both bronchial arteries | Success | Improved, recurred |
| Thyrocervial trunk | Success | ||
| Aberrant bronchial artery | Failure (selection failure) | ||
| 7 | Left bronchial artery | Success | Improved |
| Right bronchial artery | Failure (arterial dissection) | ||
| 8 | Both bronchial arteries | Success | Improved |
| Aberrant bronchial artery | Failure (selection failure) | ||
| 9 | Both bronchial arteries | Success | Improved |
| Left internal mammary artery | Success | ||
| Intercostal artery | Failure (arterial dissection) |
Technical failure was not a complete failure, but a failure of embolization of some vessel after embolization of most target vessels. aThe patient underwent left upper lobectomy of lung
Characteristics of patients with and without recurrent bleeding after embolization
TB, tuberculosis; PVA, polyvinyl alcohol; NBCA, N-butyl-2-cyanoacrylate; BA, bronchial artery; AbBA, aberrant bronchial artery; NBSC, non-bronchial systemic collaterals
Fig. 3Recurrence-free survival curves correlating to cause of bleeding. The recurrence-free survival rates were highly correlated with cause of bleeding (p = 0.013), and an especially short recurrence-free time was observed in tuberculosis sequelae and pneumonia group
Fig. 4Recurrence-free survival curves correlating to embolized artery. Presence of aberrant bronchial artery or non-bronchial systemic collaterals showed a statistically significant correlation with lower recurrence-free survival rate (p = 0.021)