Primary spontaneous pneumothorax (PSP) commonly occurs in lean, tall, male children and adolescents. To reduce recurrence rates of PSP, chemical pleurodesis could be helpful for patients undergoing video-assisted thoracoscopic surgery (VATS) wedge bullectomy. The efficacy and safety of intraoperative OK-432 (Picibanil) pleurodesis on preventing the recurrence of PSP in pediatric patients remain unclear.
It is a retrospective observational study in a single center, between 2014 and 2020, enrolled 48 (8 females) pediatric PSP patients with persistent air leakage at the mean age of 16.3 ± 1.1 years to receive VATS wedge bullectomy and pleural abrasion. Twenty patients received additional intraoperative OK-432 pleurodesis. The clinical characteristics of patients, surgical outcomes, and recurrence rates were analyzed.
The OK-432 group had longer operation time (118.6 ± 35.6 vs. 96.5 ± 23.3 min; p < 0.05) and higher proportion of postoperative fever (75.0% vs. 28.5%; p = 0.015) than the standard group. No serious adverse events were noted and other surgical outcomes in the two groups were comparable. After a mean follow-up period of 18.1 ± 19.1 months, the OK-432 group had a lower recurrence rate compared with the standard group (5% vs. 28.6%; p < 0.05, odds ratio 0.13, 95% confidence interval: 0.01–1.15), but it had no significant difference in statistics on the Kaplan–Meier curves (log-rank p = 0.105).
It was the first study that focused on the addition of intraoperative OK-432 pleurodesis for PSP with persistent air leakage in children and adolescents receiving VATS. It demonstrated the efficacy with a low recurrence rate and short-term safety as a single-center experience.
Retrospective review, therapeutic study, Level III.