Clinical manifestations and treatment outcomes of pulmonary aspergilloma

Objective: In developing countries like India where tuberculosis is highly prevalent, the incidence of pulmonary aspergilloma is also high. Mortality and morbidity associated with surgical treatment of aspergilloma in previous studies has discouraged surgeons from taking up surgery as the preferred...

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Veröffentlicht in:Heart vessels and transplantation 2024, Vol.8 (Ahead of Print)
Hauptverfasser: Ganta, Kiran, Madan, Popuri, Cherukumudi, Amulya
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Objective: In developing countries like India where tuberculosis is highly prevalent, the incidence of pulmonary aspergilloma is also high. Mortality and morbidity associated with surgical treatment of aspergilloma in previous studies has discouraged surgeons from taking up surgery as the preferred treatment. This study focuses on the clinical outcome of patients with pulmonary aspergilloma and its surgical management. Methods: Fifty-one patients who underwent thoracotomy for pulmonary aspergilloma from 2015 to 2017 were studied retrospectively by reviewing their medical records. Results: The most common clinical presentation of pulmonary aspergilloma was hemoptysis, which occurred in 76.0% of patients. Tuberculosis was the most common pre-existing disease (72%). High resolution computed tomography of chest, showed the typical "air-crescent" sign in all patients. Systemic antifungal therapy neither palliated the clinical symptoms nor eradicated the aspergilloma, and transarterial embolisation was also unsuccessful. Surgery offered the only chance of cure for both unilateral and bilateral disease. Procedures varied from segmentectomy to pneumonectomy with most (75%) undergoing lobectomy. There was no death following surgery and postoperative complications occurred in 5 patients. Postoperatively, most of the patients were symptom-free. Conclusion: Symptomatic pulmonary aspergilloma patients are best treated by early surgical intervention with good results in experienced centers.
ISSN:1694-7886
1694-7894
DOI:10.24969/hvt.2023.432