Enhanced Positioning Strategies to Reduce Pneumothorax in CT-Guided Lung Biopsies
This study aimed to investigate pneumothorax risk, focusing on the gravitational effect of pleural pressure caused by specific patient positioning. We retrospectively analyzed 144 percutaneous CT-guided lung biopsies performed between January 2019 and December 2023. Patients were grouped into those...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Diagnostics (Basel) 2024-12, Vol.14 (23), p.2639 |
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Zusammenfassung: | This study aimed to investigate pneumothorax risk, focusing on the gravitational effect of pleural pressure caused by specific patient positioning.
We retrospectively analyzed 144 percutaneous CT-guided lung biopsies performed between January 2019 and December 2023. Patients were grouped into those with or without pneumothorax. Variations in patient positioning (prone, supine, lateral, lesion in decubitus biopsy-side-down [LD BSD] and the dependent area [L DA M], and access route beginning in the dependent area [AR LD M]) were compared using the chi-square, Fisher's exact, and Mann-Whitney U tests. Performance metrics were evaluated. Univariate and binomial logistic regression models assessed the influence of these factors and other patient-related and interventional parameters on pneumothorax occurrence.
Three positional variants (AR DA M, L DA M, and L LD BSD;
< 0.001), general emphysema (
= 0.009), emphysema in the access route (
= 0.025), greater needle size (18G vs. 20G;
< 0.001), and the use of a side-cut instead of a full-core system (
= 0.002) were significantly linked to lower peri-interventional pneumothorax incidence. Even after adjusting for various factors, AR DA M and general emphysema remained independently associated with a reduced pneumothorax risk (OR 0.168,
< 0.001; OR 2.72,
= 0.034). Assessing the dependent zones showed superior performance regardless of the patient's position, with the best performance demonstrated for AR DA M (AUC 0.705; sensitivity 60%, specificity 81.8%).
Focusing on the dependent zones of each lung and adjusting the access route accordingly can significantly reduce the risk of pneumothorax compared to conventional positioning techniques. |
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ISSN: | 2075-4418 2075-4418 |
DOI: | 10.3390/diagnostics14232639 |