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Congenital lung malformation patients experience respiratory infections after resection: A population-based cohort study

articles · StayCurrentMD · Jan 12, 2022
Abstract

Purpose

The benefit of elective resection of congenital lung malformations continues to be debated. Proponents of resection endorse a decreased risk of respiratory complications as one indication for surgery. Our study aimed to compare the prevalence of respiratory infections in cases, before and after resection of congenital lung malformations, to controls without a history of congenital lung malformation.

Methods

We performed a retrospective cohort study of children born from 1991-2007 who underwent congenital lung malformation resection. Patients were identified from Winnipeg´s Surgical Database of Outcomes and Management (WiSDOM), and a 10:1 date-of-birth matched control group was generated from a population-based administrative data repository. International Classification of Disease codes were used to assess pulmonary infection outcomes. Relative rates (RR) were calculated to compare the frequency of pneumonia, respiratory infections and influenza between cases and controls.

Results

We included 31 congenital lung malformation cases and 310 controls. Cases consisted of 14 (45.16%) congenital pulmonary airway malformations, 9 (29.03 %) bronchopulmonary sequestrations and 8 (25.81%) hybrid lesions. Before resection, pneumonia was more common in cases than controls (RR 6.85; 95%CI 3.89, 11.9), while the risk of acute respiratory infections (RR 1.21; 95%CI 0.79, 1.79) and influenza (RR 0.46; 95%CI 0.01, 3.22) were similar to controls. Post-resection, the risk of pneumonia (RR 9.75; 5.06, 18.50) was still higher in cases than controls, and respiratory infections (RR 1.77; 95%CI 1.20, 2.53) and influenza (RR 3.98; 95%CI 1.48, 9.36) were more common in cases than controls.

Conclusion

Our study demonstrated that after resection of congenital lung malformations, children experience more frequent respiratory infections compared to the general population. Resection does not eliminate the increased risk of pneumonia.

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