Elective surgery for giant bullous emphysema - A 5-year clinical and functional follow-up
Academic Article
Publication Date:
2005
abstract:
Background: So far, very few studies in the literature have reported data on the long-term
follow-up of patients who have undergone surgery for giant bullous emphysema (GBE), and much
still needs to be known on the late fate of these patients.
Aims: To evaluate patients who have undergone elective surgery due to GBE, early and late
mortality following surgery, the early and late reappearance of bullae, and the early and late
modifications of clinical and functional data.
Subjects and methods: Forty-one consecutive patients (36 men; mean [ SD] age, 48.4 14.8
years) who underwent elective surgery for GBE were enrolled in a prospective study, and were
studied both before and after undergoing bullectomy for a 5-year-follow-up period. Analyses
were performed on the whole population and on two subgroups of patients who were divided on
the basis of the absence of underlying diffuse emphysema (group A; n 23) or the presence of
underlying diffuse emphysema (group B; n 18).
Results: The early mortality rate was 7.3% (within the first year), and the late mortality rate was 4.9%
(overall mortality rate at 5 years, 12.2%; mortality rate in group B, 27.8%). Bullae did not reappear
and residual bullae did not become enlarged in any patients at the site of the bullectomy. During the
follow-up, the dyspnea score was reduced significantly soon after bullectomy and up to the fourth
year of follow-up; intrathoracic gas volume also was reduced significantly (average, 0.7 L). The same
was true for the FEV1 percent predicted and the FEV1/vital capacity ratio, which kept increasing until
the second year; then, from the third year of follow-up these values were reduced, yet remained
above the prebullectomy values until the fifth year of follow-up. When considered separately, the
patients in group B appeared to be the most impaired, clinically and functionally (eg, FEV1 showed
a similar significant increase up to the second year in both groups after surgery, while a different
mean annual decrease was appreciable from the second to the fifth year of follow-up: group A, 25
mL/year; group B, 83 mL/year. Furthermore, patients in group B were the only ones who contributed
to the mortality rate, on the whole showing a behavior similar to that of patients who had undergone
lung volume reduction surgery.
Conclusions: In patients with GBE who were enrolled in the study prospectively and were investigated
yearly during a 5-year-follow-up period, elective surgery appears to have been fairly safe, and
allowed clinical and functional improvement for at least 5 years. Better results may be expected in
patients without underlying diffuse emphysema.
Iris type:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
COPD; pulmonary; function test; thoracic surgery
List of contributors:
Rossi, Giuseppe
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