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Review

Comparing approaches to the management of malignant pleural effusions

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Pages 273-284 | Received 27 Nov 2016, Accepted 24 Feb 2017, Published online: 08 Mar 2017
 

ABSTRACT

Introduction: Management of symptomatic malignant pleural effusions is becoming more complex due to the range of treatment options, which include therapeutic thoracenteses, thoracoscopic talc pleurodesis, bedside pleurodesis with talc or other sclerosing agents via small-bore chest catheters, indwelling pleural catheters, surgery, or a combination of some of these procedures.

Areas covered: Recent advances for the expanding range of treatment options in malignant pleural effusions are summarized, according to the best available evidence.

Expert commentary: Selection of a treatment approach in malignant pleural effusions should take into account patient preferences and performance status, tumor type, predicted prognosis, presence of a non-expandable lung, and local experience or availability. The role of pleurodesis has decreased with the advent of indwelling pleural catheters, which provide a high degree of symptomatic relief on an outpatient basis and, therefore, are being positioned as a first choice therapy in many centers. Talc poudrage pleurodesis should probably be reserved for those situations in which pleural tumor invasion is discovered during diagnostic thoracoscopy. Ongoing randomized controlled trials will offer solid evidence on which of the available palliative approaches should be selected for each particular patient.

Declaration of interest

G. Lee is a National Health Medical Research Council (NHMRC) Career Development Fellow and has received research project grant funding from the NHMRC, New South Wales Dust Disease Board, Sir Charles Gairdner Research Advisory Committee, Westcare and the Cancer Council of Western Australia.

G. Lee is a lead investigator of AMPLE-2, a multicenter randomized trial for which Rocket Medical provides free drainage equipment for participants. Prof Lee has served on the advisory board of CareFusion and Sequana Med Ltd and has received an unrestricted educational grant from Rocket Medical UK for clinical research. The remaining authors have no relevant affiliation or financial involvement with any organization or entity with a financial interest in or financial conflict with the subject matter or material discussed in the manuscript.

Additional information

Funding

This paper was not funded.

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