Thoracic Cancer (Apr 2022)

Epidemiologic evaluation of pleurisy diagnosed by surgical pleural biopsy using data from a nationwide administrative database

  • Kanako Hara,
  • Kei Yamasaki,
  • Masahiro Tahara,
  • Hiroaki Ikegami,
  • Chinatsu Nishida,
  • Keiji Muramutsu,
  • Yoshihisa Fujino,
  • Shinya Matsuda,
  • Kiyohide Fushimi,
  • Hiroshi Mukae,
  • Kazuhiro Yatera

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1111/1759-7714.14368
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 8
pp. 1136 – 1142

Abstract

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Abstract Background Pleural biopsies for investigating the causes of pleurisy are performed through modalities including needle biopsies, local anesthetic thoracoscopic procedures, and surgery (video‐assisted thoracoscopic surgery and open thoracotomy). To date, there have been no large‐scale nationwide epidemiological studies regarding pleurisy diagnosed via surgical pleural biopsy. This study examined the epidemiology of pleurisy diagnosed via surgical pleural biopsy in a Japanese nationwide administrative database. Methods We evaluated Japanese Diagnosis Procedure Combination data of 24 173 patients who underwent video‐assisted thoracoscopic surgery or open thoracotomy and received a diagnosis of pleurisy between April 2014 and March 2020. In addition to pleurisy diagnoses, the patients' clinical information, including age, sex, smoking status (pack‐years), dyspnea grade, length of in‐hospital stay, and comorbidities, were extracted from the dataset. Results This study included data from 1699 patients. The most frequent causes of pleurisy were neoplastic diseases (55.9%; malignant mesothelioma 22.5%, lung cancer 15.7%, lymphoma 2.5%), followed by infectious diseases (24.0%; tuberculosis 16.2%, parapneumonic pleural effusion 3.6%, empyema 3.5%, nontuberculous mycobacteriosis 0.5%), collagen vascular diseases (2.8%; rheumatoid arthritis 1.3%, immunoglobulin G4‐related diseases 0.7%, systemic lupus erythematosus 0.3%), and paragonimiasis (0.1%). Conclusions Neoplastic diseases, including malignant mesothelioma and lung cancer, were frequently and accurately diagnosed as pleurisy via surgical pleural biopsy. The next leading cause was infectious diseases such as mycobacterial infections. Physicians should consider performing surgical biopsy in light of the knowledge regarding the etiology of pleurisy when a definitive diagnosis cannot be made via needle pleural biopsy.

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