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Long-term follow-up of tuberculosis-destroyed lung patients after surgical treatment

Hongyun Ruan, Fangchao Liu, Yunsong Li, Yuxuan Wang, Dongdong Hou, Xinting Yang, Bin Liu, Teng Ma, Zhidong Liu

2022BMC Pulmonary Medicine13 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BACKGROUND: To monitor dypsnea and mortality at 5 and 10 years, respectively, after surgical treatment of tuberculosis-destroyed lung (TDL) patients. METHODS: TDL patients treated surgically at Beijing Chest Hospital from November 2007 to June 2019 were monitored in this observational study. Follow-up assessments of respiratory function indicators and survival conducted 5 and 10 years post-surgery led to patient grouping based on mMRC score into a dyspnea group (mMRC ≥ 1) and a non-dyspnea group (mMRC = 0). Cox regression analysis detected effects of patient demographics, clinical characteristics, surgical factors and respiratory function on 5 year post-surgical survival. RESULTS: By study completion (June 30, 2020), 32 of 104 patients were lost and 72 completed follow-up for a study total of 258.9 person-years. 45 patients (62.5%, 45/72) had mMRC scores of 0, while 12 (16.7%, 12/72), 21 (36.2%, 21/58) and 27 (60.0%, 27/45) patients exhibited dyspnea by 1, 3 and 5 years post-surgery, respectively. Low lung carbon monoxide diffusion score (DLCO% pred) and scoliosis contributed to dyspnea occurrence. CONCLUSIONS: Most TDL patients lacked subjective dyspnea signs post-surgery, while dyspnea rates increased with time. Preoperative low lung diffusion function and Scoliosis were associated with factors for postoperative dyspnea. Surgical treatment increased TDL patient survival overall.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineDLCOSurgeryPulmonary function testingRespiratory failureDiffusing capacityLungLung functionInternal medicinePleural and Pulmonary DiseasesLung Cancer Diagnosis and TreatmentDiagnosis and treatment of tuberculosis
Long-term follow-up of tuberculosis-destroyed lung patients after surgical treatment | Litcius