Schnuck Jamie K, Acker Shannon N, Kelley-Quon Lorraine I, Lee Justin H, Shew Stephen B, Fialkowski Elizabeth, Ignacio Romeo C, Melhado Caroline, Qureshi Faisal G, Russell Katie W, Rothstein David H
Department of General Surgery, University of Washington, Seattle, WA, USA.
Department of General Surgery, Children's Hospital Colorado, Denver, CO, USA.
J Pediatr Surg. 2024 Sep;59(9):1730-1734. doi: 10.1016/j.jpedsurg.2024.01.006. Epub 2024 Jan 17.
Studies of adults undergoing lung resection indicated that selective omission of pleural drains is safe and advantageous. Significant practice variation exists for pleural drainage practices for children undergoing lung resection. We surveyed pediatric surgeons in a 10-hospital research consortium to understand decision-making for placement of pleural drains following lung resection in children.
Faculty surgeons at the 10 member institutions of the Western Pediatric Surgery Research Consortium completed questionnaires using a REDCap survey platform. Descriptive statistics and bivariate analyses were used to characterize responses regarding indications and management of pleural drains following lung resection in pediatric patients.
We received 96 responses from 109 surgeons (88 %). Most surgeons agreed that use of a pleural drain after lung resection contributes to post-operative pain, increases narcotic use, and prolongs hospitalization. Opinions varied around the immediate use of suction compared to water seal, and half routinely completed a water seal trial prior to drain removal. Surgeons who completed fellowship within the past 10 years left a pleural drain after wedge resection in 45 % of cases versus 78 % in those who completed fellowship more than 10 years ago (p = 0.001). The mean acceptable rate of unplanned post-operative pleural drain placement when pleural drainage was omitted at index operation was 6.3 % (±4.6 %).
Most pediatric surgeons use pleural drainage following lung resection, with recent fellowship graduates more often omitting it. Future studies of pleural drain omission demonstrating low rates of unplanned postoperative pleural drain placement may motivate practice changes for children undergoing lung resection.
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对接受肺切除术的成年人的研究表明,选择性不放置胸腔引流管是安全且有益的。对于接受肺切除术的儿童,胸腔引流的做法存在显著的实践差异。我们对一个由10家医院组成的研究联盟中的儿科外科医生进行了调查,以了解儿童肺切除术后胸腔引流管放置的决策情况。
西部儿科外科研究联盟10个成员机构的外科教员使用REDCap调查平台完成问卷。描述性统计和双变量分析用于描述儿科患者肺切除术后胸腔引流管的指征和管理方面的回答。
我们收到了109位外科医生中的96份回复(88%)。大多数外科医生一致认为,肺切除术后使用胸腔引流管会导致术后疼痛、增加麻醉药物使用并延长住院时间。对于与水封相比立即使用吸引器的看法存在差异,并且一半的人在拔管前常规进行水封试验。在过去10年内完成 fellowship 的外科医生在楔形切除术后45%的病例中留置胸腔引流管,而10多年前完成 fellowship 的外科医生这一比例为78%(p = 0.001)。在初次手术时省略胸腔引流的情况下,计划外术后胸腔引流管放置的平均可接受率为6.3%(±4.6%)。
大多数儿科外科医生在肺切除术后使用胸腔引流,近期完成 fellowship 的毕业生更常省略使用。未来关于省略胸腔引流且计划外术后胸腔引流管放置率低的研究可能会促使接受肺切除术的儿童的实践发生改变。
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