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Journal Articles on Mesothelioma: Cancer Information for Patients and Families

Video-Thoracoscopic Surgical Pleurodesis in the Management of Malignant Pleural Effusion: The Importance of an Early Intervention

Monday, July 25th, 2005.

Journal of Pain and Symptom Management. Volume 30, Issue 1 , July 2005, Pages 75-79. [Link]

Antonio Marrazzo MD, PhDCorresponding Author Contact Information, Antonio Noto MD, Luigi Casà MD, Pietra Taormina MD, Domenico Lo Gerfo MD, Massimo David MD and Sebastiano Mercadante MD

Abstract

Thoracentesis plays an important role in cancer patients with symptomatic effusions, although its effect is short-lived and symptoms recur in almost all patients. Early video-thoracoscopic surgical pleurodesis may provide added benefit to a group of patients with advanced cancer presenting with symptomatic malignant pleural effusion. Seventy-six patients with advanced cancer and pleural effusion due to pulmonary-pleural metastases were recruited. In 51 cases (67.1%), at least one thoracentesis was performed before admission for surgery. Preoperative staging consisted of chest radiograph, CT scan, and blood gas analysis. The mean Karnofsky performance status was about 50. Pleurodesis with talc poudrage was completely successful in all patients, with a morbidity rate of 2.6%. There was no post-operative mortality. Three patients (3.9%) underwent further thoracenteses for recurrence of pleural effusion within two months after the procedure. Early use of talc insufflated by video-thoracoscopic surgery is an effective and relatively safe method for treating pleural effusion, and preventing recurrence, in advanced cancer patients.

Glossary

staging
the process of finding out whether cancer has spread and if so, how far. There is more than one system for staging. The TNM system, described below, is one used often. The TNM system for staging gives three key pieces of information: T refers to the size of the Tumor N describes how far the cancer has spread to nearby Nodes M shows whether the cancer has spread (Metastasized) to other organs of the body Letters or numbers after the T, N, and M give more details about each of these factors. To make this information somewhat clearer, the TNM descriptions can be grouped together into a simpler set of stages, labeled with Roman numerals. In general, the lower the number, the less the cancer has spread. A higher number means a more serious cancer.
scan
a study using either x-rays or radioactive isotopes to produce images of internal body organs.
recurrence
cancer that has come back after treatment. Local recurrence is when the cancer comes back at the same place as the original cancer. Regional recurrence is when the cancer appears in the lymph nodes near the first site. Distant recurrence is when it appears in organs or tissues (such as the lungs, liver, bone marrow, or brain) farther from the original site than the regional lymph nodes. Metastasis means that the disease has recurred at a distant site.
morbidity
a measure of the new cases of a disease in a population; the number of people who have a disease.
mortality
a measure of the rate of death from a disease within a given population.
cancer
malignancy; a group of diseases typified by abnormal, generally out-of-control, cell growth.
CT scan
computed tomography (tom-og-ruh-fee), an imaging test in which many x-rays are taken of a part of the body to produce cross-sectional pictures of internal organs. Except for the injection of a dye (needed in some but not all cases), this is a painless procedure that can be done in an outpatient clinic. It is often referred to as a "CT" or "CAT" scan.
pleural effusion
an abnormal accumulation of fluid, usually caused by trauma or disease, in the pleural space.

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