Loading clinical trials...
Loading clinical trials...
Showing 1-2 of 2 trials
NCT07120867
The goal of this clinical trial is to find out if performing a pleural fluid drainage (thoracentesis) together with the measurement of pressure inside the chest (pleural manometry) during the same procedure can help doctors choose the best treatment for each patient with malignant pleural effusion.The main questions it aims to answer are: * Is the use of pleural manometry associated with a higher success rate in managing malignant pleural effusion through pleurodesis? * Can the use of pleural manometry help guide optimal therapeutic decision-making in malignant pleural effusion? Researchers will compare the success of the chosen treatment in patients who undergo pleural manometry to those who do not, to see if pleural manometry helps improve treatment outcomes for malignant pleural effusion. Participants will: * Receive treatment according to the hospital's standard clinical practice for managing malignant pleural effusion. * If assigned to the manometry group, they will undergo pleural manometry during their first thoracentesis. * If the manometry results suggest that the lung can fully expand, they will be referred for pleurodesis-just as patients in the non-manometry group are. * If the manometry results suggest that the lung cannot fully expand, pleurodesis will not be recommended due to the high risk of failure. Instead, placement of a tunneled pleural catheter will be advised to help control symptoms.
NCT06742099
Approximately half of all patients with metastatic cancer develop a malignant pleural effusion which is likely to lead to a significant reduction in quality of life secondary to symptoms such as dyspnoea and cough. The aim of pleurodesis in these patients is to prevent re-accumulation of the effusion and thereby of symptoms,and avoid the need for repeated hospitalization for thoracocentesis. Numerous clinical studies have been performed to try to determine the optimal pleurodesis strategy, and synthesis of the available evidence should facilitate this. The treatment of MPE is aimed at palliating symptoms since no intervention has been shown to improve survival in this population and since survival is generally limited in cancers that have spread to the pleural space. In this palliative setting, only patients symptomatic from their MPE should be submitted to further intervention. As well, further interventions in symptomatic patients should be limited to those patients who have experienced symptomatic improvement following initial therapeutic thoracentesis. The two main treatment approaches to MPE are to obliterate the pleural space via a pleurodesis procedure or to chronically drain the pleural cavity with Intercostal tube. The aims of this review were to ascertain the optimal procedure in cases of malignant pleural effusion in terms of patients' quality of life post procedure, recurrence of effusion.