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Is conservative management noninferior to interventional treatment for moderate to large primary spontaneous pneumothoraces?

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 July 2020

Herman Johal*
Affiliation:
CCFP-Emergency Medicine Residency Program, University of Calgary, Calgary, AB
Andrew McRae
Affiliation:
Department of Emergency Medicine, Cumming School of Medicine, University of Calgary, Calgary, AB
Greg Beller
Affiliation:
CCFP-Emergency Medicine Residency Program, University of Calgary, Calgary, AB
*
Correspondence to: Dr. Herman Johal, Department of Emergency Medicine, 1403 29 Street NW, Calgary, ABT2N 2T9; Email: [email protected]

Abstract

Type
Commentary
Copyright
Copyright © Canadian Association of Emergency Physicians 2020

INTRODUCTION

Background: Current American and British Pulmonology Guidelines advise immediate interventional management of most large (>2 cm at hilum; >3 cm at apex) primary spontaneous pneumothoraces.Reference MacDuff1,Reference Baumann, Strange and Heffner2

Objectives: Is observation of moderate-to-large primary spontaneous pneumothoraces (> 32% by Collins method) noninferior to immediate interventional management assessed by complete lung re-expansion within 8 weeks.

METHODS

Design

Multicenter randomized, open-label, noninferiority trial, with 9% noninferiority margin to demonstrate conservative management is not inferior to interventional treatment.

Setting

Thirty-nine hospitals in Australia and New Zealand.

Subjects

Patients aged 14–50 years with first-time unilateral primary spontaneous pneumothorax of ≥32%.

Intervention

Conservative (repeat imaging after 4 hours, discharge if no supplemental oxygen required; chest tube inserted if clinically unwell) v. intervention (chest tube (≤12 F) with suction; remove and discharge if resolved on chest x-ray at 4 hours or admission).

Outcomes

The primary noninferiority outcome was complete radiographic resolution of the pneumothorax 8 weeks after randomization. Numerous secondary outcomes.

RESULTS

A total of 316 of the 2,637 screened patients underwent randomization; 154 patients to the intervention group, and 162 in the conservative-management group. The prespecified noninferiority margin was (-9%) for re-expansion by 8 weeks. The authors based this on an expected resolution rate of 99% for the intervention group and believed a failure rate of 1 in 10 would be clinically acceptable. A margin this size may bias toward finding statistical noninferiority where there is clinical inferiority.

In the Complete Case analysis, the resolution rate in the intervention group was 129/131 (98.5%). Five patients were lost to follow-up, and 18 did not have chest radiography data available at 8 weeks. In the conservative group, 118/125 (94.4%) had a resolved pneumothorax on chest radiography at 8 weeks, 3 patients were lost to follow-up, and 34 did not have complete data. The Risk Difference was −4.1%, 95% CI −8.6 to 0.5, p = 0.02.

APPRAISAL

Strengths

  • First study to assess conservative v. interventional therapy in moderate-large primary pneumothoraces

  • Used both clinician and patient-centered secondary outcomes that can impact a shared decision-making model

  • In addition to a complete case analysis, they also performed two sensitivity analyses, including one in which missing data were imputed as treatment failure (i.e. worst-case scenario).

Limitations

  • This study was unblinded, which could bias findings (treating physicians were more likely to report radiographic resolution of pneumothorax in the intervention group when compared with blinded radiologists)

  • The two sensitivity analyses identify potential statistical fragility in the main findings

  • A shorter-term primary outcome might reveal greater disparity between conservative v. treatment groups

  • The noninferiority margin of 9% is large

  • 15.4% of patients (25) in the conservative treatment group required intervention

  • 19% of randomized patients (60) lost to follow-up or had missing outcome data

  • Radiographic resolution is not a patient-centered outcome.

CONTEXT

Conservative management has been the standard of care for small primary spontaneous pneumothoraces for many years. The British Thoracic SocietyReference MacDuff1 and the American College of Chest PhysiciansReference Baumann, Strange and Heffner2 both currently recommend that clinically stable patients with large primary spontaneous pneumothorax undergo interventional management with a small-bore catheter or chest tube, followed by hospitalization in many cases. In Canada, these patients are commonly treated with a pigtail catheter and discharged home from the emergency department (ED). This study is a step toward validating an observational approach to large pneumothoraces in a carefully selected population.

BOTTOM LINE

Although this study contains some statistical fragility, there is modest evidence that a conservative approach may be noninferior to intervention in carefully selected patients with first time, moderate to large spontaneous pneumothorax. While many Canadian ED physicians may choose a pigtail catheter, any form of tube thoracostomy has potential adverse consequences. This study may identify an alternative option that can be used in shared decision-making with the appropriately selected patient.

Competing interests

None declared.

References

REFERENCES

MacDuff, A. 2010 BTS Pleural Disease Guideline Group. Management of spontaneous pneumothorax: British Thoracic Society Pleural Disease Guideline. Thorax 2010;65(Suppl 2):ii1831.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Baumann, MH, Strange, C, Heffner, JE, et al. Management of spontaneous pneumothorax: an American College of Chest Physicians Delphi Consensus Statement. Chest 2001;119(2):590602.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed