Indonesian Journal of Medicine
Vol 5, No 4 (2020)

The Relationship of Amount of Pleural Fluid and Time of Pleurodesis with the Results of Pleurodesis in Malignant Pleural Effusions

Sutanto, Yusup Subagio (Unknown)
Sigit, Indarto (Unknown)
Kurniawan, Hendra (Unknown)



Article Info

Publish Date
27 Jan 2021

Abstract

Background: Pleural effusion can be an early sign of lung cancer in more than 25% of cases. Lung cancer is the most common cause of ma­lignant pleural effusion (MPE). Pleuro­desis is performed when the amount of pleu­ral fluid is <150 ml/day, but it is difficult as its productive nature. This study aimed to find the right time to perform pleurodesis on patients with MPE, which is expected to achieve optimal results.Subjects and Method: This was a cross-sec­tio­nal study conducted at Dr. Moewardi Hos­pital, Surakarta, Central Java, from June to July 2020. The study subjects were 17 pati­ents with malignant pleural effusion (MPE) diag­nos­ed with lung cancer who underwent water seal drainage (WSD) and indicated for pleurodesis. The dependent variable was the success of the pleurodesis procedure. The independent varia­bles were the amount of evacuated pleural fluid and the time of pleu­rodesis performed. The stu­dy instruments were diagnosis of lung cancer with anatomic pathology, measurement of the amount of pleural fluid, and posteroanterior chest X-ray evaluating the success of pleuro­desis. The data were analyzed using Spearman corre­lation, ANOVA to determine the differen­ces in the amount of pleural fluid at the first, second, and third hours, and continued with post hoc LSD analysis using SPSS 21.Results: The pleurodesis success rate had posi­tive correlation with the amount of pleural fluid (r= 0.24; p= 0.345) and the time of pleu­ro­­desis performed at the first hour (r= 0.10; p= 0.701), second hour (r= 0.03; p= 0.921), and third hour (r= 0.41; p= 0.106). Pleurodesis per­form­ed at the second hour had the lowest amount of pleural fluid (Mean= 84.66; SD= 38.88), followed by third hour (Mean= 110.77; SD= 65.57), and first hour (Mean= 111.22; SD= 57.83), but the differences were not statistically significant (p= 0.285).Conclusion: The pleurodesis success rate has a positive correlation with the amount of pleu­ral fluid and the time of pleurodesis, but it was not statistically significant. There is no signifi­cant difference in the amount of pleural fluid eva­cuated at the three different times of pleuro­desis. The least amount of pleural fluid obtains at the second hour (14.00-22.00).Keywords: malignant pleural effusion, amou­nt of pleural fluid, pleurodesis, pleuro­desis timeCorrespondence: Yusup Subagio Sutanto. Department of Pul­mo­­­no­logy and Respiratory Medicine, Fa­culty of Me­di­cine Universitas Sebelas Maret, Dr. Moewar­di Hospital, Surakarta. Jl. Kolonel Sutarto 132, Surakarta 57126, Central Java. Email: dr_­yusupsubagio­@yahoo.com. Mobile: +628112­8­­4165.Indonesian Journal of Medicine (2020), 05(04): 337-342https://doi.org/10.26911/theijmed.2020.05.04.09. 

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Journal Info

Abbrev

theijmed

Publisher

Subject

Medicine & Pharmacology Public Health

Description

Indonesian Journal of Medicine (IJM) is an international, open-access, and double-blind peer-reviewed journal, focusing on the intersection of biomedical science, clinical medicine, and community medicine. The journal began its publication on August 20, 2015, and is published online three times ...