Outpatient Talc Administration by Indwelling Pleural Catheter for Malignant Effusion

Rahul Bhatnagar(North Bristol NHS Trust), Emma Keenan(North Bristol NHS Trust), Anna J. Morley(North Bristol NHS Trust), Brennan C Kahan(Queen Mary University of London), Andrew Stanton(University of Bristol), Mohammed Haris(University Hospitals of North Midlands NHS Trust), Richard Harrison(North Tees and Hartlepool NHS Foundation Trust), Rehan Mustafa(South Tees Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust), Lesley Bishop(University of Bristol), Liju Ahmed(Guy's and St Thomas' NHS Foundation Trust), Alex West(Guy's and St Thomas' NHS Foundation Trust), Jayne Holme(University of Bristol), Matthew Evison(University of Bristol), Mohammed Munavvar(Lancashire Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust), Pasupathy Sivasothy(Cambridge University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust), Jürgen Herre(Cambridge University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust), David Cooper(Northumbria Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust), Mark Roberts(Sherwood Forest Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust), Anur Guhan(NHS Ayrshire and Arran), Clare Hooper(Worcestershire Acute Hospitals NHS Trust), James Walters(University of Bristol), Tarek Saba(University of Bristol), Biswajit Chakrabarti(University of Liverpool), Samal Gunatilake(Hampshire Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust), Ioannis Psallidas(University of Bristol), Steven Walker(North Bristol NHS Trust), Anna Bibby(North Bristol NHS Trust), Sarah Smith(North Bristol NHS Trust), Louise Stadon(North Bristol NHS Trust), Natalie Zahan-Evans(North Bristol NHS Trust), Gary Lee(The University of Western Australia), John Harvey(North Bristol NHS Trust), Najib M. Rahman(University of Bristol), Robert F. Miller(University of Bristol), Nick Maskell(North Bristol NHS Trust)
New England Journal of Medicine
April 4, 2018
Cited by 276Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Malignant pleural effusion affects more than 750,000 persons each year across Europe and the United States. Pleurodesis with the administration of talc in hospitalized patients is the most common treatment, but indwelling pleural catheters placed for drainage offer an ambulatory alternative. We examined whether talc administered through an indwelling pleural catheter was more effective at inducing pleurodesis than the use of an indwelling pleural catheter alone. METHODS: Over a period of 4 years, we recruited patients with malignant pleural effusion at 18 centers in the United Kingdom. After the insertion of an indwelling pleural catheter, patients underwent drainage regularly on an outpatient basis. If there was no evidence of substantial lung entrapment (nonexpandable lung, in which lung expansion and pleural apposition are not possible because of visceral fibrosis or bronchial obstruction) at 10 days, patients were randomly assigned to receive either 4 g of talc slurry or placebo through the indwelling pleural catheter on an outpatient basis. Talc or placebo was administered on a single-blind basis. Follow-up lasted for 70 days. The primary outcome was successful pleurodesis at day 35 after randomization. RESULTS: The target of 154 patients undergoing randomization was reached after 584 patients were approached. At day 35, a total of 30 of 69 patients (43%) in the talc group had successful pleurodesis, as compared with 16 of 70 (23%) in the placebo group (hazard ratio, 2.20; 95% confidence interval, 1.23 to 3.92; P=0.008). No significant between-group differences in effusion size and complexity, number of inpatient days, mortality, or number of adverse events were identified. No significant excess of blockages of the indwelling pleural catheter was noted in the talc group. CONCLUSIONS: Among patients without substantial lung entrapment, the outpatient administration of talc through an indwelling pleural catheter for the treatment of malignant pleural effusion resulted in a significantly higher chance of pleurodesis at 35 days than an indwelling catheter alone, with no deleterious effects. (Funded by Becton Dickinson; EudraCT number, 2012-000599-40 .).


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis