Am. J. Respir. Crit. Care Med., Vol 155, No. 4, Apr 1997, 1295-1301.
Objective predictors of response for staple versus laser emphysematous lung reduction
M Brenner, R McKenna Jr, A Gelb, K Osann, MJ Schein, J Panzera, H Wong, MW Berns and AF Wilson
Department of Medicine, University of California Irvine Medical Center, Chapman General Hospital, Orange 92668, USA.
Recently described surgical approaches to the treatment of emphysema,
including buttressed stapled volume reduction and laser coagulation, are
associated with variable clinical outcomes. We examined objective
preoperative factors as predictors of response to treatment in patients
enrolled in a randomized trial of staple versus laser volume-reduction
surgery in order to help define patient selection criteria for these
procedures. Seventy-two patients with severe symptomatic emphysema without
bullae were entered into the protocol (39 staple, 33 laser). Preoperative
objective variables (pulmonary function tests, smoking history,
demographics, and graded chest computed tomographic [CT] scans) were
evaluated as predictors of response to treatment (defined as a change in
FEV1) at 3- to 6-mo follow-up, using linear and multivariate regression
analysis. Follow-up pulmonary function was obtained on 90% of the 68
patients surviving at 6 mo. Overall improvement was significant only for
staple-treated patients, and improved outcome correlated with greater
smoking history and younger age for staple-treated patients. When
physiologic variables were analyzed, greater smoking history, lower DL(CO),
and younger age predicted improved outcome for laser-treated patients.
Preoperative FEV1 and gas-exchange variables did not predict outcome in
staple- treated patients. When CT scan grading was included in multivariate
regression analysis, hyperinflation (increased thoracic gas volume) was the
primary predictor of response for laser-treated patients. These findings
suggest that younger patients with evidence of advanced emphysematous lung
disease and hyperinflation are optimal candidates for lung-volume-reduction
surgery, particularly by staple-reduction techniques. Additional studies
with long-term follow-up, bilateral procedures, and assessment of other
outcome measures must be performed to further define operative criteria for
lung-volume-reduction surgery for emphysema.
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Copyright © 1997 American Thoracic Society
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