Overview
Randomized Study Comparing Pleural Drainage by Videothoracoscopy to Medical Drainage in Infectious Pleural Effusion
Status:
Unknown status
Unknown status
Trial end date:
2017-10-01
2017-10-01
Target enrollment:
0
0
Participant gender:
All
All
Summary
Infectious pleural effusion is a classic complication of pneumonia and often require pleural drainage. There is no consensus between surgical drainage and medical drainage indication in first intention to treat an empyema. Usually surgery is proposed in second intention after failure of medical drainage. Videothoracoscopy is well accepted in diagnosis and treatment of pleural pathologies. The morbidity of this approach is very low with good results and become the gold standard in different pleural diseases. The medical drainage can be also very efficient but its results depends of the evolution of the pleural effusion. The rate of failure is estimated around 25%. Then, the aim of our study is to compare surgical drainage and medical drainage in first intention. The first end-point will be the hospital stay (day). Hospital discharge will be strict, following different objective criteria of healing allowing comparison between these two approaches of drainage. To answer this question we will randomized 50 patients in 2 years with a multicenter recruitment.Phase:
N/AAccepts Healthy Volunteers?
NoDetails
Lead Sponsor:
University Hospital, Rouen
Criteria
Inclusion Criteria:- Infectious pleural effusion diagnosed by pleural punction with biologic features of
infection: C Reactive Protein level >5 mg/L, White cells counts > 10000 G/L,
Temperature >38°c, effusion with a ph<7,2 or presence of polynuclear, and radiologic
features of effusion requiring drainage (>1/5 thoracic volume)
Exclusion Criteria:
- prior thoracic surgery, past history of pleural effusion
- compressive effusion which should be treated in emergency
- Pregnancy
- No acceptance of the protocol by the informed patient