Litcius/Paper detail

Quality of life outcomes in tracheobronchomalacia surgery

Joseph T. McGinn, Benoît Herbert, Andrew H. Maloney, Byron Patton, Richard Lazzaro

2020Journal of Thoracic Disease15 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Tracheobronchomalacia (TBM) is an obstructive airway disease characterized by laxity and redundancy of the posterior membrane of the main airways leading to dynamic airway collapse during exhalation. The gold standard for diagnosis is dynamic computed tomography (DCT) scan and dynamic flexible bronchoscopy (DFB). Patients with complete or near-complete collapse (>90% reduction in cross-sectional area) of the airway are possible candidates for surgical management. Central airway stabilization by tracheobronchoplasty (TBP) effectively corrects malacic airways and has demonstrated significant improvement in objective functional measures, which is often but not uniformly accompanied by equal improvement in health-related quality of life (HRQOL) metrics. This article reviews HRQOL instruments used to report outcomes after TBM surgery.

Topics & Concepts

TracheobronchomalaciaMedicineAirwayGold standard (test)BronchoscopyQuality of life (healthcare)ExhalationPerioperativeRadiologySurgeryIntensive care medicineNursingTracheal and airway disordersDysphagia Assessment and ManagementVoice and Speech Disorders