Pneumothorax Clinical Trial
Official title:
Intrapleural Minocycline After Simple Aspiration for the Prevention of Primary Spontaneous Pneumothorax: A Randomized Trial
The estimated recurrence rate of primary spontaneous pneumothorax is 23-50% after the first
episode, and the optimal treatment remains unknown. In the recently published British
Thoracic Society (BTS) guidelines, simple aspiration is recommended as first line treatment
for all primary pneumothoraces requiring intervention. However, the 1 year recurrence rate
of this procedure was as high as 25-30%, making it inappropriate as a standard of care.
Intrapleural instillation of a chemical irritant (chemical pleurodesis) is an effective way
to shorten the duration of air leaks and reduce the rates of recurrent spontaneous
pneumothorax in surgical and non-surgical patients. Many chemical irritants (tetracycline,
talc, and minocycline) have been used to decrease the rate of recurrence in spontaneous
pneumothorax. Tetracycline, which was the most commonly used irritant, is no longer
available. Talc insufflation of the pleural cavity is safe and effective for primary
spontaneous pneumothorax. However, it should be applied either with surgical or medical
thoracoscopy. Minocycline, a derivative of tetracycline, is as effective as tetracycline in
inducing pleural fibrosis in rabbits. In the previous studies, we have shown that additional
minocycline pleurodesis is a safe and convenient procedure to decrease the rates of
ipsilateral recurrence after thoracoscopic treatment of primary spontaneous pneumothorax. In
the present study, additional minocycline pleurodesis will be randomly administered in
patients with first episode of primary spontaneous pneumothorax after simple aspiration to
test if it can reduce the rate of recurrence.
Background:
Primary spontaneous pneumothorax most commonly occurs in young, tall, lean males (1, 2). The
estimated recurrence rate is 23-50% after the first episode (3). Optimal treatment of
patients presenting with a first episode of primary spontaneous pneumothorax remains
unknown. In the recently published British Thoracic Society (BTS) guidelines (4), simple
aspiration is recommended as first line treatment for all primary pneumothoraces requiring
intervention. However, the 1 year recurrence rate of this procedure was as high as 26-30%
(5), making it inappropriate as a standard of care.
Intrapleural instillation of a chemical irritant (chemical pleurodesis) is an effective way
to shorten the duration of air leaks and reduce the rates of recurrent spontaneous
pneumothorax in surgical and non-surgical patients (6, 7). Light et al. has shown that
intrapleural tetracycline is effective in reducing the rate of ipsilateral recurrence for
patients with spontaneous pneumothorax (7). However, the recently published guidelines
recommended that chemical pleurodesis should only be attempted if the patient is either
unwilling or unable to undergo surgery because the rates of recurrence of pneumothoraces
after surgical intervention either by thoracotomy or VATS, with or without surgical
pleurodesis, is far less than after chemical pleurodesis (4, 8). As a result, chemical
pleurodesis has rarely been used in primary spontaneous pneumothorax, and the effect of
additional chemical pleurodesis after simple aspiration in preventing recurrence of
pneumothoraces has never been evaluated.
Tetracycline, which was the most commonly used irritant, is no longer available.
Minocycline, a derivative of tetracycline, is as effective as tetracycline in inducing
pleural fibrosis in rabbits (9). In the previous studies, we have shown that additional
minocycline pleurodesis is a safe and convenient procedure that associates with lower rates
of prolonged air leaks and ipsilateral recurrence after thoracoscopic treatment of primary
spontaneous pneumothorax (10, 11).
In the present study, additional minocycline pleurodesis will be randomly administered in
patients with first episode of primary spontaneous pneumothorax after simple aspiration to
test if it can reduce the rate of recurrence. This study will comply with the protocol, GCP
and applicable requirement of the Institutional Review Boards (IRB) of the NTUH and Far
Eastern Memorial Hospital.
Patients and Methods:
Study design This study is a prospective, randomized, controlled trial to evaluate if
additional minocycline pleurodesis after simple aspiration will be effective in preventing
recurrence of primary spontaneous pneumothorax.
Primary Objective The primary end point is to compare the rates of ipsilateral recurrence
between the minocycline and observation groups after simple aspiration of the pneumothorax.
Secondary Objectives
1. Safety profile of minocycline pleurodesis
2. Early results, including immediate success rates, one-week success rates, complication
rates, rates of hospitalization, duration of hospitalization, and the degrees of chest
pain.
3. Long-term effects of minocycline pleurodesis, including degrees of residual chest pain
and pulmonary function test.
Eligibility criteria
Patients must meet ALL of the inclusion criteria for the entry of this study:
1. Male or female.
2. Age between 15 and 40 years old.
3. First episode of spontaneous pneumothorax.
4. Symptomatic (dyspnea or chest pain) or the rim of air is > 2cm on CXR requiring simple
aspiration
5. Complete or nearly complete and persistent lung expansion immediately following manual
aspiration
6. Organ Function Requirements:
1. Adequate hematological function (Hb > 10 g/dl, ANC > 1.5 x 109/L, platelets > 100
x 109/L)
2. Normal renal and hepatic functions: serum creatinine < 1 x ULN, SGPT and SGOT< 2.5
x ULN, alkaline phosphatase < 5 x ULN
7. Written inform consent
The exclusion criteria are:
1. With underlying pulmonary disease (asthma, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease,
bronchiectasis, etc)
2. With hemothorax or tension pneumothorax requiring chest tube insertion or operation
3. A history of previous pneumothorax
4. A history of previous ipsilateral thoracic operation
5. Allergy to tetracycline or minocycline
6. Pregnant or lactating patients.
7. Other serious concomitant illness or medical conditions:
1. Congestive heart failure or unstable angina pectoris.
2. History of myocardial infarction within 1 year prior to the study entry.
3. Uncontrolled hypertension or arrhythmia.
4. History of significant neurologic or psychiatric disorders, including dementia or
seizure.
5. Active infection requiring i.v. antibiotics. Subjects who are unwilling to undergo
randomization, treatment, or follow-up procedures will be removed from the study.
Subjects can also withdraw from the trial at any time point by their will.
Randomization:
Patients will be randomized at each center with separate random number lists into one of the
two treatment groups using a computer-generated table numerically corresponding with the
treatment group. The trial treatment randomization codes will be maintained until the end of
the study and will be broken by investigators who were blind to the randomization procedure.
Manual aspiration Manual aspiration will be performed as follows: patients were seated in
semi-supine position. After skin disinfection and field preparation, a small-caliber
pig-tail catheter (6-10 French) will be introduced after local anesthesia with 2% lidocaine
in the second intercostal space, at the midclavicular line. After the catheter enters the
pleural space, the catheter will be fixed to the skin using sterile adhesive tape and
connected via a three-way valve to a 50-ml syringe. Air will be manually aspirated, until a
resistance was felt and air was no longer aspirated. Thereafter, a chest X-ray will be
performed with the catheter in place.
Minocycline pleurodesis In the minocycline group, 30 mL of 1% lidocaine hydrochloride
(300mg) followed by a solution of 30 mL of normal saline containing 300 mg of minocycline
(Mirosin®, Taiwan Panbiotic Laboratories, Kaohsiung, Taiwan) will be instilled into the
pleural cavity through the pig-tail catheter or chest tube. In the observation group,
nothing will be administered. Administration of other chemical pleurodesis agents is
prohibited during the study period. Intramuscular meperidine hydrochloride (Demerol®,
50mg/ampule) will be administered every 4 to 6 hours according to the patient's request if
the pain became intolerable, could not be relieved by oral analgesics, and visual analogue
scale was greater than 7. Chest radiography will be performed immediate postoperatively or
the next morning. VAS will be evaluated immediately 6 hours later after minocycline
administration.
Study Endpoints:
The primary end point will be rate of ipsilateral recurrence after the procedure. Secondary
end points include safety, early results, and long-term effects of minocycline pleurodesis.
Immediate success rates: defined as complete or nearly complete and persistent lung
expansion immediately following manual aspiration. Immediate success for chest tube drainage
is defined as complete lung expansion, absence of air leakage, and chest drain removal
within 24 hours after catheter placement.
One weeks success rates are defined as complete and persistent lung expansion at one weeks
after the first attempt of aspiration or tube insertion.
One-year success: absence of recurrent pneumothorax during a 1-year follow-up period. .
Safety assessments:
Safety assessments will consist of monitoring and recording all toxicity, adverse events,
safety laboratory examination, vital signs, physical examination. The adverse events which
are not reported will be graded as mild, moderate, severe, and life-threatening. Adverse
event will be tabulated and the incidence rates will be calculated.
Sample size estimation:
A sample size of 300 patients (150 in each group) will be needed to reach clinical
significance (at the .05 level with a power of 0.9) if minocycline reduced the recurrence
rate from 30% to 15% and the drop out rate is 10%. A planned interim analysis will be
conducted after enrollment of 150 patients with at least 12 months of follow-up. Statistical
analysis will be performed on an intent-to-treat basis rather than in an actual treatment
basis.
Follow-up After discharge from the hospital, patients will be followed at the outpatient
clinics at 1 week, 1 month, 3 months, and 6 months where chest radiography will be
performed. Follow-ups will then be conducted every 6 months by a registered nurse who is
blinded to the group allocation by telephone conversation, according to a standard
questionnaire that included when the patient returns to work or school, whether a recurrence
occurred, when it happened, and how it is treated. Residual postoperative chest pain will be
evaluated on a pain score from 0 to 5, where 0 is pain free; 1 is occasional discomfort; 2
is occasional use of analgesics; 3 is using nonopiate analgesics; 4 is regular pain using
opiates; 5 is severe and intractable pain. All patients will be followed for at least 12
months. Patients can come back to the clinic or visit emergency department whenever they
have chest pain, dyspnea, or any signs related to the recurrence of pneumothorax.
Pulmonary function analysis Pulmonary function tests will be performed for patients able to
attend a hospital outpatient appointment at least 6 months after surgery. Forced vital
capacity (FVC) and forced expiratory volume in 1 second (FEV1.0) will be measured using a
spirometer of Microspiro HI-298 (Chest Corporation, Tokyo, Japan) with the patients seated.
A minimum of three acceptable forced expiratory maneuvers will be performed and the best one
will be selected for analysis.
Data collection and statistical analysis The clinical data, duration of chest drainage,
length of hospital stay, complications, requested doses of meperidine, and data of VAS will
be collected. Continuous variables such as age or weight will be expressed as the mean +
standard deviation and analyzed by the two sample t-test. Categorical variables such as
gender or smoking status will be presented by frequency (%) and analyzed by the Fisher's
exact test. Intensity of postoperative pain measured by VAS (from 0 to 10) were summarized
by mean (95 percent confidence interval) and compared by Wilcoxon rank-sum test. Scores of
residual chest pain will be analyzed by the Wilcoxon rank-sum test. Freedom from recurrence
will be analyzed by the Kaplan-Meier method, and comparisons will be made by the log-rank
test.
Reference:
1. Gobbel WG Jr, Rhea WG, Nelson IA, Daniel RA Jr. Spontaneous pneumothorax. J Thorac
Cardiovasc Surg 1963;46:331-345.
2. Lichter J, Gwynne JF. Spontaneous pneumothorax in young subjects. Thorax
1971;25:409-417.
3. Light RW. Management of spontaneous pneumothorax. Am Rev Respir Dis 1993;148:245-258.
4. Henry M, Arnold T, Harvey J; Pleural Diseases Group, Standards of Care Committee,
British Thoracic Society. BTS guidelines for the management of spontaneous
pneumothorax. Thorax 2003;58(Supple 2):39-52.
5. Noppen M, AJRCCM, 2003
6. Hatta T, Tsubota N, Yoshimura M, Yanagawa M. Intrapleural minocycline for postoperative
air leakage and control of malignant pleural effusion. Kyobu Geka 1990;43:283-286.
7. Light RW, O'Hara VS, Moritz TE, McElhinney AJ, Butz R, Haakenson CM, Read RC, Sassoon
CS, Eastridge CE, Berger R, et al. Intrapleural tetracycline for the prevention of
recurrent spontaneous pneumothorax. JAMA 1990;264:2224-2230.
8. Baumann MH, Strange C, Heffner JE, Light R, Kirby TJ, Klein J, Luketich JD, Panacek EA,
Sahn SA; AACP Pneumothorax Consensus Group. Management of spontaneous pneumothorax: an
American College of Chest Physicians Delphi consensus statement. Chest
2001;119:590-602.
9. Light RW, Wang NS, Sassoon CSH, Gruer SE, Vargas FS. Comparison of the effectiveness of
tetracycline and minocycline as pleural sclerosing agents in rabbits. Chest
1994;106:577-582.
10. Chen JS, Hsu HH, Kuo SW, Tsai PR, Chen RJ, Lee JM, Lee YC: Effects of additional
minocycline pleurodesis after thoracoscopic procedures for primary spontaneous
pneumothorax. Chest 2004;125:50-55.
11. Chen JS, Hsu HH, Chen RJ, Kuo SW, Huang PM, Tsai PR , Lee JM, Lee YC: Additional
minocycline pleurodesis after thoracoscopic surgery for primary spontaneous
pneumothorax. Am J Respir Crit Care Med 2006;173: 548-554.
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Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Safety/Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Treatment
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