The third PLeuralEffusion And Symptom Evaluation (PLEASE-3) study: Bendopnoea in patients with pleural effusion.

IF 0.8 Q4 RESPIRATORY SYSTEM
Respirology Case Reports Pub Date : 2024-06-17 eCollection Date: 2024-06-01 DOI:10.1002/rcr2.1410
Bapti Roy, Bianca M Iacopetta, Carolyn J Peddle-McInytre, Michaela Donaghy, Matthew Ing, Ai Ling Tan, Y C Gary Lee
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: Pleural effusions often cause disabling breathlessness, however the mechanism is unknown. Patients with pleural effusions are subjected to pleural fluid drainage on a 'trial and error' basis, as symptom relief varies. This population commonly complain of bendopnoea (breathlessness on bending forward) which has not been investigated. Our pilot data found bendopnoea was significantly associated with presence of pleural effusion. The PLEASE-3 study will evaluate bendopnoea as a screening test for effusion-related breathlessness, its predictive value of symptomatic benefits from fluid drainage and explore its underlying physiological mechanism.

Methods: PLEASE-3 is a multi-centre prospective study. Eligible patients are assessed at baseline (pre-drainage) and for patients undergoing drainage, up to 72 h post-procedure. Outcome measures include the prevalence of bendopnoea, its correlation with size of effusion and its predictive value of breathlessness relief after drainage. The relationship of bendopnoea with breathlessness, physiological parameters, functional capacity and diaphragmatic characteristics will be assessed. The study will recruit 200 participants.

Discussion: This is the first study to investigate bendopnoea in patients with pleural effusion. It has minimal exclusion criteria to ensure that the results are generalisable. The presence and clinical significance of bendopnoea in the context of pleural effusion requires thorough investigation. The post assessment of patients undergoing pleural fluid drainage will provide insight into whether the presence of bendopnoea is able to predict clinical outcomes.

Trial registration: Name of the registry: Australia New Zealand Clinical Trial Registry Trial registration number: ACTRN12622000465752. URL of the trial registry record for this trial: https://www.anzctr.org.au/Trial/Registration/TrialReview.aspx?id=383639&isReview=true Date of registration: Registered on 24 March 2022. Funding of the trial: This study has received funding from the Sir Charles Gairdner Research Advisory Council research project grant. The study is sponsored by the Institute for Respiratory Health, a not-for-profit organisation. Name and contact information for the trial sponsor: Mr Bi Lam; Finance manager. Level 2, 6 Verdun Street, Nedlands WA 6009. t‖ + 61 8 6151 0877 e‖ bi.lam@resphealth.uwa.edu.au Role of sponsor : The funder is not involved in the planning of the study, gathering, analysing, and interpreting the data, or in preparing the manuscript.

第三次胸腔积液和症状评估(PLEASE-3)研究:胸腔积液患者的双侧呼吸困难。
背景:胸腔积液通常会引起致残性呼吸困难,但其机理尚不清楚。胸腔积液患者的症状缓解情况各不相同,因此只能在 "反复试验 "的基础上进行胸腔积液引流。这类患者通常会抱怨弯腰呼吸困难(向前弯腰时呼吸困难),但这一问题尚未得到研究。我们的试点数据发现,弯腰呼吸困难与胸腔积液的存在明显相关。PLEASE-3 研究将评估弯腰呼吸作为渗出相关呼吸困难筛查测试的作用、其对引流液体后症状缓解的预测价值,并探索其潜在的生理机制:PLEASE-3 是一项多中心前瞻性研究。符合条件的患者将在基线(引流前)接受评估,接受引流的患者将在术后 72 小时内接受评估。结果测量包括呼吸困难的发生率、呼吸困难与积液大小的相关性以及对引流后呼吸困难缓解的预测价值。此外,还将评估憋气与呼吸困难、生理参数、功能能力和膈肌特征之间的关系。该研究将招募 200 名参与者:讨论:这是第一项调查胸腔积液患者呼吸困难情况的研究。该研究采用了最低限度的排除标准,以确保研究结果具有普遍性。需要对胸腔积液患者出现呼吸困难及其临床意义进行深入研究。对接受胸腔积液引流术的患者进行术后评估将有助于深入了解是否存在呼吸困难可预测临床结果:登记处名称:澳大利亚-新西兰临床试验登记处 试验登记号:ACTRN12622000465ACTRN12622000465752。该试验注册记录的网址:https://www.anzctr.org.au/Trial/Registration/TrialReview.aspx?id=383639&isReview=true 注册日期:注册日期:2022 年 3 月 24 日。试验经费:本研究获得了查尔斯-盖尔德纳爵士研究咨询委员会(Sir Charles Gairdner Research Advisory Council)研究项目基金的资助。该研究由非营利组织呼吸健康研究所(Institute for Respiratory Health)赞助。试验赞助者的姓名和联系方式:毕林先生;财务经理。Level 2, 6 Verdun Street, Nedlands WA 6009. 电话‖ + 61 8 6151 0877 电子信箱‖ bi.lam@resphealth.uwa.edu.au 资助者的作用:资助者不参与研究的计划、数据的收集、分析和解释,也不参与手稿的准备。
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来源期刊
Respirology Case Reports
Respirology Case Reports RESPIRATORY SYSTEM-
CiteScore
1.40
自引率
0.00%
发文量
178
审稿时长
8 weeks
期刊介绍: Respirology Case Reports is an open-access online journal dedicated to the publication of original clinical case reports, case series, clinical images and clinical videos in all fields of respiratory medicine. The Journal encourages the international exchange between clinicians and researchers of experiences in diagnosing and treating uncommon diseases or diseases with unusual presentations. All manuscripts are peer-reviewed through a streamlined process that aims at providing a rapid turnaround time from submission to publication.
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