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Malignant Pleural Effusion: Prevalence ~ 200,000 MPE / year in USA 1:4 Lung Cancer pt; 1:3 Breast; 9:10 Mesothelioma ~ 100,000 MPE from Lung Cancer / yr in Europe Pleural effusion is the first sign of cancer in 25% of patients with MPE Light RW & Lee YCG. Textbook of Pleural Disease, 2 nd ed. 2008

Malignant Pleural Effusion: Prevalence

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Malignant Pleural Effusion: Prevalence. ~ 200,000 MPE / year in USA 1:4 Lung Cancer pt; 1:3 Breast; 9:10 Mesothelioma ~ 100,000 MPE from Lung Cancer / yr in Europe Pleural effusion is the first sign of cancer in 25% of patients with MPE. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Malignant Pleural Effusion:  Prevalence

Malignant Pleural Effusion: Prevalence

• ~ 200,000 MPE / year in USA 1:4 Lung Cancer pt; 1:3 Breast; 9:10 Mesothelioma

• ~ 100,000 MPE from Lung Cancer / yr in Europe

• Pleural effusion is the first sign of cancer in 25% of patients with MPE

Light RW & Lee YCG. Textbook of Pleural Disease, 2nd ed. 2008

Page 2: Malignant Pleural Effusion:  Prevalence

Malignant Pleural Effusions

• 95% MPM pts suffer from a pleural effusion

• Dyspnea most common presenting symptom

• Fear of ‘drowning to death’

Page 3: Malignant Pleural Effusion:  Prevalence

Malignant Effusion: significant burden

Western Australia (population 2 million):

Year

2004

Tot

al B

ed D

ays

6500

7000

7500

8000

8500

9000

9500

10000

2005 2006 2007 2008 2003

~8,000 inpatient bed days per year

US$10 million inpatient costper year

Page 4: Malignant Pleural Effusion:  Prevalence

Myths in Malignant EffusionsAlthough MPE common recent advances in

knowledge has shed light on many myths in

- Why symptoms develop

- Diagnostic workup and limitations

- Pleurodesis and its limitations

- Indwelling pleural catheters: pros and cons

Page 5: Malignant Pleural Effusion:  Prevalence

Myth:

Patients with malignant effusions are breathless

because the fluid compresses on the lung,

restricting its expansion.

Page 6: Malignant Pleural Effusion:  Prevalence

Why are patients breathless?

Effects on Diaphragm: Weight of the effusion profoundly affects the diaphragm Dyspnea related to effect on the diaphragm:

- No dyspnea if diaphragm domed and moves normally- Severe dyspnea if diaphragm inverted and not move

with respiration

Lee YCG & Light RW. in Encyclopedia of Respiratory Disease 2006

Effects on Lung Function: For 1 L fluid drained: FEV1 or FVC 0.2 L; TLC 0.4 LLung Compression not the key factor

Page 7: Malignant Pleural Effusion:  Prevalence

Why are patients breathless? The pleural cavity expands to accommodate the fluid.

Altered respiratory mechanics contribute to breathlessness

Page 8: Malignant Pleural Effusion:  Prevalence

Why are patients breathless? Drainage of effusion remove weight from

hemidiaphragm and restore respiratory mechanics

Page 9: Malignant Pleural Effusion:  Prevalence

Courtesy: Dr Naj Rahman

Small effusion Diaphragm normal

Large effusion Diaphragm inverted

Page 10: Malignant Pleural Effusion:  Prevalence

2.93kg

Sofia Lee born Sept 09

3kg

3L effusion

Page 11: Malignant Pleural Effusion:  Prevalence

Myth:

Drainage of effusion in patients with a trapped

lung is not useful.

Page 12: Malignant Pleural Effusion:  Prevalence

Drainage of effusion in patients with a trapped lung can still improve symptoms

70/M Metastatic Thyroid Cancer

Page 13: Malignant Pleural Effusion:  Prevalence

Myth:

The more fluid sent for cytology, the more likely

you can make a malignant diagnosis.

Page 14: Malignant Pleural Effusion:  Prevalence

Pleural fluid for Cytology Analyses

‘More likely to make a malignant diagnosis on cytology if you send more fluid?’ True or False

No significant increase in sensitivity of cytology when >50mL of fluid is sent:

Swiderek J et al Chest 2010 Abouzgheib W et al Chest 2009Sallach SM et al Chest 2002Anderson CB et al Cancer 1974

Page 15: Malignant Pleural Effusion:  Prevalence

Cytology diagnostic sensitivity 20-60% depends on: type of tumor (adeno >> mesothelioma)

experience of cytologiststumor load

Benign MPM TTF-1

Light RW & Lee YCG. Textbook of Pleural Disease, 2nd ed. 2008

Indication: Diagnosis of Pleural Malignancy

Page 16: Malignant Pleural Effusion:  Prevalence

Myth:

Pleuroscopy or Thoracoscopy biopsy can safely

exclude malignant pleural disease.

Page 17: Malignant Pleural Effusion:  Prevalence

Pleuroscopy / Medical Thoracoscopy

Jacobaeus performing thoracoscopy

Felice Cova

Tassi GF. International Pleural Newsletter 2004

Page 18: Malignant Pleural Effusion:  Prevalence

• Thoracoscopy is not gold standard

• 142 Medical Thoracoscopy / Pleuroscopy

• Negative Predictive Value 90%

• False negative occurs – all mesothelioma

• Similar rate to previous papers - despite advances in immunohist/thoracoscopy

Page 19: Malignant Pleural Effusion:  Prevalence

Mesothelioma: nodular lesions

Page 20: Malignant Pleural Effusion:  Prevalence

Mesothelioma: diffuse thickeningbiopsy often fibrous tissue onlyfalse negative possible

Page 21: Malignant Pleural Effusion:  Prevalence

Myth:

FDG PET is not useful in management of

malignant pleural diseases.

Page 22: Malignant Pleural Effusion:  Prevalence

PETLimited diagnostic value:

• Malignancy vs benign pleural diseases• Mesothelioma vs metastatic carcinoma

West SD & Lee YCG. Clin Pulm Med 2006

Page 23: Malignant Pleural Effusion:  Prevalence

Percutaneous biopsy guided by PET/CTEvolving option. In selected patients can be useful.

Page 24: Malignant Pleural Effusion:  Prevalence

Response – 1 cycle chemo

Francis et al J Nucl Med 2007;48:1449-1458

Prognosis

Nowak et al. Clin Cancer Res; 2010, 16(8); 2409–17.

Semiquantitative FDG PET using volume-based parameter of TGV

Page 25: Malignant Pleural Effusion:  Prevalence

Novel Tracers in mesothelioma

FLT – FluorothymidineThymidine is a pyrimidine analogue incorporated into DNA CELL PROLIFERATION tracerNot influenced by pleural inflammation, infection or pleurodesis

Courtesy Prof Ros Francis (Australia)

Page 26: Malignant Pleural Effusion:  Prevalence

baseline

post chemo

FLT PET response assessment

Courtesy Prof Ros Francis (Australia)

Page 27: Malignant Pleural Effusion:  Prevalence

Hypoxia imaging in mesothelioma

FMISO PET-CT

FDG PET-CT

Page 28: Malignant Pleural Effusion:  Prevalence

18F-Annexin Phase I: apoptosis markerScan before vs after chemotherapy to assess response

Page 29: Malignant Pleural Effusion:  Prevalence

Myth:

Pleurodesis is the standard first choice for

management of malignant pleural effusions.

Page 30: Malignant Pleural Effusion:  Prevalence

• This approach is now strongly challenged

i) Pleurodesis (talc) is less efficacious as often reported and can induce significant complications

ii) Aim for management is relief of Dyspnea and QoL: Drainage is the key

Pleural Effusion: Management

Light RW & Lee YCG. Textbook of Pleural Diseases 2nd ed 2008

Page 31: Malignant Pleural Effusion:  Prevalence

Cou

rtes

y D

r R

odri

guez

Pan

ader

o

Page 32: Malignant Pleural Effusion:  Prevalence

Courtesy Dr Carla Lamb

Controversy: Is talc better delivered via • thoracoscopy (poudrage) or chest tube (slurry)

‘Talc poudrage is superior: Distribute talc over entire pleural surface’Fact or Myth?

Page 33: Malignant Pleural Effusion:  Prevalence

TALC IS NOT GLUE !!!

Even spread over pleura not essential

Page 34: Malignant Pleural Effusion:  Prevalence

Dresler CM. Chest 2005: Multicenter phase III study talc poudrage (n=242) vs slurry (n=240)

at 6 months < 50%

Page 35: Malignant Pleural Effusion:  Prevalence

Thoracoscopic poudrage v Bedside pleurodesisDresler et al.Chest 2005

Poudrage n=242

Slurryn=240

Successful Pleurodesis (30 d) 78% 71% p=NS

Yim AP et al. Ann Thorac Surg 1996

Poudragen=28

Slurryn=29

No recurrence 27 26 p=NS

Terra RM et al. Chest 2009

Poudragen=30

Slurryn=30

No symptomatic recurrence 25 26 p=NS

Mohsen et al. Eur J Cardiothorac Surg 2010

Poudragen=22

Iodinen=20

No further intervention 20 17 p=NS

Page 36: Malignant Pleural Effusion:  Prevalence

Failed VATS Pleurodesis

Page 37: Malignant Pleural Effusion:  Prevalence

Dresler CM. Chest 2005: CALGB phase III study

More side effects from thoracoscopic (VATS) poudrage

2.3% patients died from ARDS

Complications of Talc Pleurodesis

Thoracoscopic Poudrage

(n=223)

Chest Tube Slurry (n=196)

Pneumonia (antibiotics) 21 (9%) 7 (4%) p=0.03

Respiratory Failure 18 (8%) 8 (4%) p=0.007

Fatal Resp Failure 5 (2%) 6 (3%) p=NS

Page 38: Malignant Pleural Effusion:  Prevalence

Significant shortcomings: • Success rate low (70%) even in selected patients

• Unsuitable in trapped lung

Overall <50% pts benefit

• Side effects common: can be lethal

Talc Pleurodesis

Page 39: Malignant Pleural Effusion:  Prevalence

Do we really need to create pleurodesis?

Relieve symptoms without pleurodesis using

Ambulatory Small Bore Catheter Drainage

Page 40: Malignant Pleural Effusion:  Prevalence

Tunnelled Indwelling Pleural Catheter

• Ambulatory drainage outside hospital • Patient controlled drainage whenever breathless

Page 41: Malignant Pleural Effusion:  Prevalence

Tunnelled Indwelling Pleural Catheter

• 39,000 units sold in USA alone each year• 1st choice for malignant effusion in many centers

Page 42: Malignant Pleural Effusion:  Prevalence

Malignant Pleural Effusion

Talc Pleurodesis

Indwelling Pleural Catheter

Cost Economics: Bed days; Inpatient costs

Page 43: Malignant Pleural Effusion:  Prevalence

IPC significantly reduce hospital days for patients with malignant effusions over talc pleurodesis

p<0.001

Effusion-Related Bed Days

IPC Pleurodesis

Day

s

0

10

20

30

40

50

60

p<0.001

N: 34 31Median: 3.0 10.0 IQR: 1.75-8.25 6.0-18.0

Fysh E et al. Chest 2012

Page 44: Malignant Pleural Effusion:  Prevalence

JAMA 2012 in press

Page 45: Malignant Pleural Effusion:  Prevalence

Randomized Trial on Management of Malignant Effusion using Indwelling Pleural Catheters

(British Lung Foundation)

Malignant Pleural Effusionsn=110

Visual Analog Score for breathlessness (daily)QoL: Wks 1, 2, 4, 6, 10, 14, 18, 22, 26, 39, 52

Ambulatory indwelling catheter drainage

Standard care & in-patient talc pleurodesis

randomize

Page 46: Malignant Pleural Effusion:  Prevalence

From: Effect of an Indwelling Pleural Catheter vs Chest Tube and Talc Pleurodesis for Relieving Dyspnea in Patients With Malignant Pleural Effusion:  The TIME2 Randomized Controlled Trial JAMA. 2012;307:2383-9

Indwelling Pleural Catheters offer the same improvement in QoL as talc pleurodesis

Page 47: Malignant Pleural Effusion:  Prevalence

Puri V et al. Ann Thorac Surg.2012 Treatment of Malignant Pleural Effusion: A Cost-Effectiveness Analysis

The most cost-effective treatment for a malignant pleural effusion (in USA setting):

• Indwelling Pleural Catheter if survival short (3 mths) • Bedside Pleurodesis if survival > 12 mths

Cost-Effectiveness

Page 48: Malignant Pleural Effusion:  Prevalence

• Define place of IPC in management algorithm of MPE

• Define optimal management and aftercare

• Significant potential to grow in its use in both malignant and non-malignant effusions

Fysh E and Lee YCG. J Thorac Oncol 2011

Page 49: Malignant Pleural Effusion:  Prevalence

Myth:

Indwelling pleural catheters are associated with

significant and serious complications

eg infection, protein loss.

Page 50: Malignant Pleural Effusion:  Prevalence

n= Incidence

Mild Pain after insertion 20/56 35.7%

Symptomatic loculation 44/621 7.0%

Pain during drainage 8/147 5.4%

Catheter Occlusion 29/624 4.6%

Pneumothorax 15/438 3.4%

Tumour Seeding 20/596 3.4%

Empyema 29/1091 2.7%

Skin infection/ Cellulitis 22/832 2.6%

Complications of Indwelling Catheters

Wrightson J, Fysh E, Maskell N, Lee YCG. Curr Opin Pulm Med 2010

Page 51: Malignant Pleural Effusion:  Prevalence

Catheter Tract Metastases

• Incidence 0-6% • Response to radiotherapy• IPCs withstand irradiation

Janes SM, Lee YCG et al. Chest 2007

Page 52: Malignant Pleural Effusion:  Prevalence
Page 53: Malignant Pleural Effusion:  Prevalence

IPC Removal

Auto-pleurodese: No drainage 4-6 wk. No fluid on CXR

Pleural infection: Only if uncontrolled sepsis

No symptom improvement with drainage

• Removal as outpatient

• Careful dissection around the cuff. PULL HARD!

• Fracture of IPC during removal a risk

Page 54: Malignant Pleural Effusion:  Prevalence

IPC Fracture• Pro-fibrotic cuff to secure

IPC in place

• Dense subcut adhesions develop over time

• Can be difficult/impossible to free adhesions to remove

• Fracture can occur, often at cuff level

• Pro-fibrotic cuff to secure IPC in place

• Dense subcut adhesions develop over time

• Can be difficult/impossible to free adhesions to remove

• Fracture can occur, often at cuff level

Page 55: Malignant Pleural Effusion:  Prevalence

IPC Fracture

• Safe to leave fractured IPC in situ • No increased infection risk• No need to retreive

Fysh et al. Chest 2012

Page 56: Malignant Pleural Effusion:  Prevalence

Myth:

Pleural effusion is always the cause of the

breathlessness in patients with a malignant

pleural effusion.

Myth:

Malignant pleural mesothelioma seldom

metastasize.

Page 57: Malignant Pleural Effusion:  Prevalence

Breathlessness Always consider other concomitant causes of dyspnea

- Lung parenchymal causesConsolidation, Trapped lung, Asbestosis

- Lung vascular and lymphatic causes Emboli, Lymphangitis

- Cardiac causes Myocardial and Pericardial diseases; Arrhythmia

- Deconditioning

Page 58: Malignant Pleural Effusion:  Prevalence

Mesothelioma in Western Australia & Bristol:A two-centre post-mortem study

• Largest post-mortem series in MPM (n=318)• Mesothelioma not a local disease: Metastatic spread common

• Extra-pleural metastases 85.2%• Nodal metastases 57.1% • Extra-thoracic metastases 59.7%

Page 59: Malignant Pleural Effusion:  Prevalence

Known (L) MPM with loculated effusionPresented acute dyspnea

Page 60: Malignant Pleural Effusion:  Prevalence

Results: Mesothelioma metastasizes

Intra-thoracic Sites

Ipsilateral parenchyma 56.8%

Pericardium 44.7%

Diaphragm 39.5%

Contralateral parenchyma 35.7%

Contralatateral pleura 31.8%

Chest wall invasion 29.6%

Myocardium 12.5%

Page 61: Malignant Pleural Effusion:  Prevalence

Results: Mesothelioma metastasizes

Extra-thoracic SitesLiver 29.1%Peritonium 24.2%Bone 15.0%Adrenals 11.7%Spleen 11.3%Kidneys 9.5%G I tract 8.0%Thyroid 7.3%Brain 2.9%

Page 62: Malignant Pleural Effusion:  Prevalence

Known (R) MPM with loculated effusionPresented acute dyspnea

Pulmonary emboli 6%; Cause of death in 4% of MPM

Page 63: Malignant Pleural Effusion:  Prevalence

Median age of MPM (UK) 75 yrs oldCo-morbidity common

Page 64: Malignant Pleural Effusion:  Prevalence

70% of asbestos workers were heavy smokersCOPD common

Page 65: Malignant Pleural Effusion:  Prevalence

Summary• Weight of malignant effusion contributes

significantly to dyspnea.

• Pleural fluid cytology is useful but large volume beyond 60mL adds little diagnostic sensitivity.

• Pleuroscopy biopsy can be false negative (~10%). Imaging guided biopsy useful alternatives.

• Indwelling pleural catheter and talc pleurodesis offer different advantages.

• Talc poudrage has no advantages over slurry.

Page 66: Malignant Pleural Effusion:  Prevalence

The incidences of mesothelioma and malignant pleural effusion are likely to continue to rise…

Page 67: Malignant Pleural Effusion:  Prevalence

Respirology 2011

Page 68: Malignant Pleural Effusion:  Prevalence

Courtesy Prof Bai (Shanghai)

Page 69: Malignant Pleural Effusion:  Prevalence

Courtesy Prof Bai (Shanghai)

Page 70: Malignant Pleural Effusion:  Prevalence
Page 71: Malignant Pleural Effusion:  Prevalence

Pleural Effusions and Vienna

Percussion (stony) dullnessdescribed 1808 by a Prof of Medicine at Vienna University

Prof Josef Leopold Auenbrugger

Son of innkeeper; used to watch his father tapping on wine barrels for level of wine left

Page 72: Malignant Pleural Effusion:  Prevalence

If only we are elephants…

Elephant are auto-pleurodesed and live happily without a pleural cavity, and never have to worry about effusions!

West J. International Pleural Newsletter 2004