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Meta-analysis

The feasibility and safety of thoracoscopic surgery under epidural and/or local anesthesia for spontaneous pneumothorax: a meta-analysis

Wei Chen
,
Chenlei Zhang
,
Gebang Wang
,
Zhengjun Li
,
Hailong Wang
,
Hongxu Liu

Videosurgery Miniinv 2017; 12 (3): 216–224
Online publish date: 2017/07/17
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Introduction

Pneumothorax was first described by Itard in 1803, and then Laennec provided a further description of it in 1819 [1]. A pneumothorax is a condition in which there is excess air in the pleural cavity. Surgery is still an all-important treatment for pneumothorax, and surgical practice has also developed with the widespread adoption of video-assisted thoracoscopic surgery (VATS) rather than open thoracotomies.
In practice, the double-lumen endotracheal tube is preferred in the operation under general anesthesia (GA) to achieve single lung ventilation, in which the operative lung is deflated to make surgery convenient and the contralateral side is ventilated to supply enough oxygen for patients. However, there are various general anesthesia-related adverse effects induced by mechanical ventilation and muscle relaxants, including ventilator-induced lung injury, postoperative intractable cough, trauma to teeth, airway injuries, postoperative nausea and vomiting, an increased risk of pneumonia, impaired cardiac performance and neuromuscular problems [2–7].
Nevertheless, the appearance of epidural and/or local anesthesia (ELA) flawlessly solves these problems. In 1997, Nezu et al. first reported the role of local anesthesia with sedation in wedge resection under VATS for spontaneous pneumothorax [8]. Meanwhile, ELA was employed in more and more thoracic diseases, such as pulmonary nodule [3, 9], lung cancer [10–13], pleurodesis for malignant pleural effusion [14], lung volume reduction surgery [15], reconstruction of trachea [16, 17] and biopsy for anterior mediastinal masses [18].
However, there is still controversy concerning the perioperative outcomes of thoracoscopic surgery for spontaneous pneumothorax under ELA versus under GA. Nezu et al. reported that compared with GA, ELA offered the benefit of shorter operative time [8], but it was not confirmed by Pompeo et al. [19]. Nezu et al. reported that ELA has a shorter postoperative hospital stay [8], but Noda et al. held the opposite opinion [20]. We performed a systematic review and meta-analysis to comprehensively estimate the feasibility and safety of thoracoscopic surgery under epidural and/or local anesthesia for spontaneous pneumothorax.

Material and methods

Strategy of literature search

A series of relevant publications were searched using PubMed, Cochrane Library, China National Knowledge Infrastructure (CNKI), CQVIP, Wanfang databases and Google Scholar, from their date of publication to June 2016. For the integrality of the search strategy, we used “video-assisted thoracoscopic surgery”, “VATS”, “general anesthesia”, “epidural anesthesia”, “local anesthesia”, “intubated anesthesia”, “nonintubated anesthesia”, “awake anesthesia”, “pneumothorax” and “spontaneous pneumothorax” as key words and MeSH terms. The relevant references of all retrieved articles were further searched to determine if they were eligible.

Inclusion and exclusion criteria

Available studies were included by the following criteria: 1. randomized controlled trial (RCT) or case-control studies; 2. thoracoscopic surgery for pneumothorax; 3. comparing surgery under epidural and/or local anesthesia (ELA group) with surgery under general anesthesia (GA group); 4. except anesthesia, the same surgical procedures were performed in all patients of each study; 5. meaningful data about operative time, global operating room time, hospital stay, complications, air leak, recurrence or perioperative mortality could be acquired, 6. published in English or Chinese.
The following exclusion criteria were applied: 1. case reports, reviews, meta-analysis, abstracts or conference reports; 2. not comparing ELA group with GA group; 3. the treatments of ELA group and GA group were different; 4. lack of the relevant data we needed.

Data extraction and quality assessment

From each study, we carefully collected the useful information: first author, publication year, study period, study design, number of patients, age and gender of the patients. The data including operative time, global operating room time, hospital stay, complications, air leak, recurrence and perioperative mortality were extracted to be analyzed in this study. The randomized controlled trial was assessed by using the Jadad scale [19]. The Newcastle-Ottawa scale (NOS) was used for quality assessment of the observational studies [8, 20–22].

Statistical analysis

The differences of studies were estimated by forest plot. With a view to the relatively large difference of the means of outcomes, the standardized mean difference (SMD) was used to analyze the continuous variables [23]. Odds ratios (OR) were used to assess the values of dichotomous variables. The heterogeneity of the results of the included studies was estimated by 2 and I2. If p > 0.10, these studies were deemed to exhibit homogeneity and a fixed effect analysis model was used. When p < 0.10 and I2 < 50%, these studies were considered to exhibit heterogeneity but the heterogeneity could be accepted, and a fixed effect analysis model was used too. When p < 0.10 and I2 > 50%, the heterogeneity was too high to be accepted, and a random effect analysis model was used. All p-values were two-sided and p < 0.05 was considered significant. Publication bias was estimated by the funnel plot, and Begg’s test and Egger’s test were used to measure asymmetry in funnel plots [24]. All statistical analysis was performed using the STATA 12.0 package (Stata Corp, College Station, TX, USA).

Results

Characteristics of studies

The process of article search is shown in Figure 1. In all, from five electronic databases, plus Google Scholar, 208 studies were extracted. Among them, five databases provided all, but there were no additional related studies. After removing repetition and irrelevant studies by carefully screening their abstract or full texts, five studies, with a total of 419 patients, met all criteria and were included in our final analysis. Table I shows a summary of them, and the period of the publication year of these studies was from 1997 to 2016. Four studies observational studies, and one study was a randomized controlled trial. The main characteristics and perioperative information of all studies included in our analysis are presented in Tables II and III, respectively.

Operative time and global operating room time

The data of operative time were reported in all five studies [8, 19–22]. The heterogeneity among these studies was significant (p = 0.002 and I2 = 76.9%) and a random effect analysis model was used. There was no difference between the ELA group and GA group (SMD = –0.29; 95% CI: –0.79 to 0.20; p = 0.246) (Figure 2). Only two studies [19, 20] included the result of global operating room time. Because of the homogeneity of the two studies (p = 0.718 and I2 = 0%), a fixed effect analysis model was adopted. We found that compared with the GA group, the ELA group had a shorter global operating room time and there was a significant difference between the two groups (SMD = –1.43; 95% CI: –1.90 to –0.96; p < 0.0001) (Figure 3).

Hospital stay

The data of hospital stay were reported in all five studies [8, 19–22]. Heterogeneity was observed (p < 0.0001 and I2 = 81.3%), so a random effect analysis model was selected. No difference was found between the ELA group and GA group (SMD = –0.41; 95% CI: –0.97 to 0.14; p = 0.146) (Figure 4).

Complications and air leak

The data of complications were reported in all five studies [8, 19–22]. A fixed effect analysis model was used on account of the lack of significant heterogeneity (p = 0.841 and I2 = 0%), and there was no difference between the groups (OR = 0.76; 95% CI: 0.35 to 1.63; p = 0.483) (Figure 5). All the included studies reported the information of air leak that is one of the complications after the surgery of pneumothorax [8, 19–22]. Due to the homogeneity among these studies (p = 0.230 and I2 = 28.7%), a fixed effect analysis model was employed. No statistically significant difference was found (OR = 0.89; 95% CI: 0.37 to 2.13; p = 0.797) (Figure 6).

Recurrence and perioperative mortality

The data of recurrence were reported in four studies [8, 19, 21, 22]. Because of the homogeneity among these studies (p = 0.840 and I2 = 0%), a fixed effect analysis model was used and suggested no difference between the ELA group and GA group (OR = 0.49; 95% CI: 0.15 to 1.55; p = 0.223) (Figure 7). The four studies [19–22] reported the related information of perioperative mortality and 6 deaths were recorded in two studies [20, 21]. Of them, 2 came from the ELA group [21] and 4 from the GA group [20]. Concerning their cause of death, Yeong Ahn et al. [21] reported that one died of pneumonia and the other one was underlying lung disease, and Noda et al. [20] reported pneumonia in 2 patients and ARDS in 2 patients.

Discussion

With the progress of surgical techniques and equipment, VATS, compared with thoracotomy, undoubtedly provides patients with minimally invasive incision and is becoming the main surgical method in thoracic surgery. With VATS under epidural and/or local anesthesia, even less damage was provided for patients. It has become more and more popular.
Recently, a variety of studies have focused on the role of ELA in thoracic surgery. In previous studies, ELA has been shown to be suitable for various chest diseases, including pneumothorax [8, 19–22], lung cancer [10–13], pleurodesis for malignant pleural effusion [14], lung volume reduction surgery [15] and so on. Secondly, it has been proved that VATS under epidural and/or local anesthesia could be performed safely for some high-risk patients [25, 26]. Furthermore, ELA avoids or reduces the incidence of ventilator-induced lung injury, trauma to teeth, airway injuries, pneumonia, impaired cardiac performance, etc [2–7]. Water and food intake after the operation can be resumed within a few hours in the ELA group [27]. And better or similar pain scores could be gained [3, 19, 28].
However, ELA still correlates with some potential complications, including unsatisfactory exposure of the surgical field, the emotional stress of patients due to awake surgery, dyspnea even with using the air-locking trocar, coughing reflexes during lung manipulation, hyperventilation induced by permissive hypercapnia, unexpected thoracic pain requiring additional local anesthesia, epidural hematoma, spinal cord injury and phrenic nerve palsy caused by inadvertently high anesthetic level [19, 21, 29]. What is worse, the process of ELA to GA conversion may induce significant mediastinal or lung movement, persistent hypoxaemia, unstable hemodynamic status or uncontrolled bleeding [30]. Gonzalez-Rivas et al. stated that the rate of conversion to general anesthesia is less than 5%, and strong adhesions, suboptimal analgesia, bleeding, intractable cough and so forth are the most common reasons for conversion [31]. However, these adverse effects of ELA are rare, and some measures can be adopted to deal with relevant complications. For instance, Chen et al. reported that intrathoracic vagal blockade was produced by infiltration of 2 ml of 0.25% bupivacaine and it could inhibit the cough reflex for 3 h or even longer [10].
Since there is still controversy about the role of ELA in VATS for pneumothorax, we conducted this meta-analysis to comprehensively assess and compare the results of the ELA group and GA group based on the related studies.
After analyzing the relevant results, we reached two main conclusions. On the one hand, there is no extreme difficulty or complex operation in the surgical procedures of the ELA group because of the lack of significant difference in operative time between the ELA group and GA group. An experienced surgical team is the key to success. The VATS operation under ELA by practiced surgeons and skilled anesthesiologists could be done with a low incidence of conversion to general anesthesia and complications [31, 32]. On the other hand, the patients in the ELA group, compared with GA, were not provided additional security and could uneventfully leave the hospital in several days. Hence the feasibility and safety of thoracoscopic surgery of spontaneous pneumothorax under ELA is demonstrated by these two conclusions.
Additionally, we had some other findings. The ELA group had a shorter global operating room time because it saved not only the preoperative time, but also the postoperative time. Wu et al. suggested that the ELA group had a shorter anesthesia induction time because it did not need time on tracheal intubation and subsequent bronchoscopic examination [12]. Also, the ELA group without muscle relaxants could expedite postoperative recovery [30, 33]. Secondly, Ahn et al. recorded 2 hospital deaths in the ELA group, of which one had destructive lung due to multiple huge bullae and resulted in mediastinal shift, and another one had underlying unusual interstitial pneumonia [21]. Thus it remains controversial whether patients with severe underlying disease could undergo ELA. According to some reported studies, American Society of Anesthesiologists (ASA) scores of greater than 3, bleeding disorders, sleep apnea, obesity (body mass index > 30 kg/m2), extensive pleural adhesions, presence of epidural puncture contraindication, expected difficult airway management (such as airway hyper-reactivity) and tumors > 6 cm were considered as contraindications of thoracoscopic surgery under ELA [31, 34, 35].

Limitations

Firstly, publication bias was tested by Begg’s test and Egger’s test and there was no significant bias (Begg’s test: p = 0.462; Egger’s test: p = 0.374, Figure 8). However, the result of publication bias was not significantly meaningful, because of lack of enough studies available for this analysis. Therefore publication bias was unavoidable. Secondly, both randomized controlled trials and observational studies were included in this analysis at the same time, which could affect the validity of the results. The third limitation was the small sample size of most relevant studies. What is worse, heterogeneities were seen in the analysis of operative time and hospital stay. The origin of heterogeneities may be that these data come from different studies – different districts, different times, and different surgical teams.

Conclusions

ELA and GA had similar operative time, hospital stay, complications, air leak, recurrence and perioperative mortality. However, ELA had a shorter global operating room time and lower incidence of related complications of GA. This analysis indicates that the thoracoscopic surgery of spontaneous pneumothorax under ELA is feasible and safe. In view of eliminating the correlated limitations and even renewing our conclusion, a well-designed and multi-centre randomized controlled trial in a large patient population with a long-term follow-up period is strongly and urgently needed.

Conflict of interest

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

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Received: 24.04.2017, accepted: 8.06.2017.
Copyright: © 2017 Fundacja Videochirurgii This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0) License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/), allowing third parties to copy and redistribute the material in any medium or format and to remix, transform, and build upon the material, provided the original work is properly cited and states its license.
  
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