Background/purpose: The role computed tomography (CT) performed prior to thoracoscopic surgery for primary spontaneous pneumothorax (PSP) remains unclear.
Methods: We retrospectively reviewed medical records of all patients who underwent thoracoscopic surgery for PSP during 2008-2012. Patients were stratified into two groups: CT group (patients who received preoperative CT scanning) and control group (patients who did not receive preoperative scanning). Short-term postoperative results and long-term pneumothorax recurrence rates were compared.
Results: A total of 298 patients were studied. Preoperative CT scanning was performed in 140 of them. The duration of operation, incidence of bullae formation, number of excised specimens, rate of complications, and postoperative hospital stay were similar between the two groups. After a mean follow-up of 20 months, the recurrence rates were 8.6% (12/140) in the CT group and 5.7% (9/158) in the control group (p = 0.371). In the CT group, five patients had unexpected pulmonary findings and three of them (60%) developed pneumothorax recurrence, the rate of which was significantly higher than that in patients without unexpected pulmonary findings (9/135, 6.7%, p = 0.004). Unexpected pulmonary lesions were more commonly noted in females (4/19, 21.1%) than in males (1/121, 0.8%; p < 0.001).
Conclusion: Preoperative CT scanning was not associated with better results after thoracoscopic surgery for PSP and is, therefore, not justified as a routine examination prior to the operation. In female patients, however, preoperative CT scanning might be needed because these patients tended to have a higher incidence of unexpected pulmonary lesions, which were associated with a higher rate of recurrence.
Keywords: computed tomography; pneumothorax; surgery; thoracoscopy.
Copyright © 2014. Published by Elsevier B.V.