Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Details — Status: Completed

Administrative data

NCT number NCT00556335
Other study ID # NL13097.075.06
Secondary ID
Status Completed
Phase N/A
First received November 9, 2007
Last updated April 5, 2013
Start date April 2007
Est. completion date April 2011

Study information

Verified date April 2013
Source Isala
Contact n/a
Is FDA regulated No
Health authority Netherlands: The Central Committee on Research Involving Human Subjects (CCMO)
Study type Interventional

Clinical Trial Summary

The purpose of this study is to evaluate the efficacy of manual aspiration in comparison to conventional chest tube drainage in pneumothorax therapy:

1. whether manual aspiration will shorten hospital admission.

2. whether the lung will expand by means of clinical and radiological findings.


Description:

No consensus has been defined concerning the exact treatment of a first episode of SP. Literature suggests similar immediate and long-term efficacy of manual aspiration and chest tube drainage. Morbidity of manual aspiration is low and the procedure is well tolerated. Manual aspiration is safe with a complication rate of only 1 % and can be performed in the outpatient clinic in the majority of patients reducing costs. Our aim is to re - evaluate these findings with a mono-centre study with 114 patients, set-up for the first time in the Netherlands with an expectancy to confirm the former findings.

Aim of the study:

To evaluate the efficacy of manual aspiration in comparison to conventional chest tube drainage in pneumothorax therapy:

1. whether manual aspiration will shorten hospital admission.

2. whether the lung will expand by means of clinical and radiological findings.

Study design: prospective single-centre, open randomised trial.

Randomisation:

With a computer minimization program for manual aspiration or usual care with special attendance to the cause of pneumothorax (spontaneous or traumatic), the presence of smoking and gender.

Statistical analysis:

Our primary aim is to demonstrate a higher efficacy for manual aspiration in terms of a shorter admission duration (LOS) in favor of manual aspiration with similar therapy success rates. We will analyse data on an intention to treat basis. P-values below 5 % will be considered statistically significant. Normal distribution will be checked. Means (standard deviations) or medians (ranges or interquartile ranges) will be calculated and unpaired t-tests or Mann Whitney U tests will be used as appropriate to test differences in LOS. Categorical data (success rates) will be analysed using Chi2-tests. Data analysis will be performed using SPSS version 12.

Study population:

Patients with the first episode of a symptomatic pneumothorax or an asymptomatic pneumothorax with a size ≥ 20 % as estimated by Light's formula ( (1-L/H )x100 ) with an age of ≥ 18 and < 85 years.

Intervention: Manual aspiration or conventional chest tube drainage. Primary study endpoint 1. The LOS.

Secondary endpoint:

1.The success rate of each technique:

Conventional chest tube drainage; complete expansion of the lung, counteraction of the air leak and removal of the drain within 72 hours.

Manual aspiration: complete expansion and discharge within 24 hours, success rate at two weeks (continuous expansion) and one year (no recurrence of pneumothorax in the interval period after discharge between 2 weeks and 1 year).

Burden, risks and advantages associated with participation:

The risks of manual aspiration and chest tube drainage techniques are the same. Complications seem to be occur in only 1 % of the aspirations and they consist of haematothorax, retained catheter tips, subcutaneous emphysema and vasovagal reactions. The most important disadvantage is in case of an unsuccessful treatment by manual aspiration with a persisting pneumothorax. Patients in this case have to undergo the conventional tube chest drainage after all. The benefit of the investigational approach is that patients are discharged earlier from the hospital in case of success and its cost effectiveness.


Recruitment information / eligibility

Status Completed
Enrollment 56
Est. completion date April 2011
Est. primary completion date April 2010
Accepts healthy volunteers No
Gender Both
Age group 18 Years to 85 Years
Eligibility Inclusion Criteria:

- patients with a first episode of a symptomatic pneumothorax admitted to the ER of the hospital (spontaneous or traumatic) or

- patients with an asymptomatic pneumothorax with a size of = 20 % as estimated by Light's formula

- age = 18 and < 85 years

- smoking is tolerated

Exclusion Criteria:

- recurrent pneumothorax

- lung fibrosis

- patients with (lung) cancer

- pregnant women

- comorbidity limiting decision making (psychiatric disease, alcohol or drug abuse)

- prior randomisation

- Marfan syndrome

- COPD patients

- tension pneumothorax

- multitrauma patients

Study Design

Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Safety/Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Treatment


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


Intervention

Procedure:
manual aspiration
air aspiration
conventional drainage
drainage, pneumocath

Locations

Country Name City State
Netherlands Isala Klinieken Zwolle

Sponsors (1)

Lead Sponsor Collaborator
Isala

Country where clinical trial is conducted

Netherlands, 

References & Publications (1)

Noppen M, Alexander P, Driesen P, Slabbynck H, Verstraeten A. Manual aspiration versus chest tube drainage in first episodes of primary spontaneous pneumothorax: a multicenter, prospective, randomized pilot study. Am J Respir Crit Care Med. 2002 May 1;165(9):1240-4. — View Citation

Outcome

Type Measure Description Time frame Safety issue
Primary The duration of length of stay of each technique 1 year No
Secondary The success rate of each technique 1 year No
See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Recruiting NCT06022081 - Lung Ultrasound Versus Chest Radiography for Detection of Pneumothorax N/A
Recruiting NCT02907866 - Use of Endobronchial Ultrasound Scope (EBUS) Transducer to Identify Pneumothorax-A Feasibility Study
Terminated NCT03034421 - Prevention of Pneumothorax Following Endoscopic Valve Therapy in Patients With Severe Emphysema N/A
Completed NCT02232841 - Electrical Impedance Imaging of Patients on Mechanical Ventilation N/A
Completed NCT02619591 - Comparison Of Chest Ultrasound Techniques To Identify Clinically Significant Pneumothorax N/A
Recruiting NCT05342675 - Effect of Rapid Rollover on Pneumothorax After CT-Guided Lung Biopsy N/A
Recruiting NCT05910112 - Prospective Data Collection on Clinical, Radiological and Patient Reported Outcomes After Pleural Intervention
Completed NCT03656406 - Effect of Lateral Positioning on Bronchial Cuff Pressure of Left-sided Double-lumen Endotracheal Tube During Thoracic Surgery
Active, not recruiting NCT06075836 - AI Assisted Detection of Chest X-Rays
Recruiting NCT03728491 - Education and Training Competences in Thoracic Ultrasound N/A
Recruiting NCT05407974 - Pleurectomy Versus Pleural Abrasion in Patients With Spontaneous Pneumothorax N/A
Completed NCT01670942 - Hypobaria and Traumatic Pneumothorax N/A
Terminated NCT00969423 - Chronic Pain After Video-assisted Thoracoscopic Surgery (VATS) Surgery for Pneumothorax N/A
Completed NCT05904574 - Effectiveness of the Autologous Blood Patch Method in Lung Biopsies
Completed NCT03327688 - Point-of-care Ultrasound in Finland N/A
Completed NCT05963945 - Multi-Reader Retrospective Study Examining Carebot AI CXR 2.0.21-v2.01 Implementation in Everyday Radiology Clinical Practice
Completed NCT05222568 - Effect of the Minimum Bronchial Cuff Volume of Left-sided Double-lumen Endotracheal Tube for One-lung Ventilation on the Change of the Bronchial Cuff Pressure During Lateral Positioning in Thoracic Surgery
Not yet recruiting NCT05121233 - Local Anesthesia Versus Combined Local Anesthesia With Single Dose Analgesia on Pain Control During Thoracic Ultrasound Guided Procedures Phase 4
Completed NCT03064659 - Driving Pressure And EFL in Adult Cardiac Surgery N/A
Recruiting NCT02090205 - Mechanical Ventilation During Cardiac Surgery N/A