Long-term outcome of patients with nonspecific pleurisy at medical thoracoscopy.
Background: Medical thoracoscopy is an effective and safe procedure for diagnosing pleural effusions of undetermined causes. But there are still a part of patients with pleural effusions were diagnosed as nonspecific pleurisy when no specific biopsy results were found after undergoing thoracoscopic biopsy. The long-term outcome of these patients is unclear, and anxieties about undiagnosed malignancy persist.
Methods: Between July 2005 and June 2014, medical thoracoscopy using the semi-rigid instrument was performed and pleural biopsy was taken in 833 patients with pleural effusions. Fifty-two patients diagnosed with nonspecific pleurisy with available follow-up data were included in the present study and their medical records were reviewed.
Results: Fifty-two patients (31 men and 21 women) were included. Mean follow up was 35.5 ± 40.9 months (range, 1-143 months). No specific diagnosis was established in 21 (40.4%) of the patients. Eight of 52 patients with nonspecific pleurisy (15.4%) were subsequently diagnosed with pleural malignancies. 23 of 52 patients (44.2%) were diagnosed as benign diseases. The recurrence of pleural effusion during followed-up and pleural nodules or plaques found in medical thoracoscopy was associated with malignant disease.
Conclusion: Patients with nonspecific pleurisy after medical thoracoscopy should be closely monitored, especially in those patients with the recurrence of pleural effusion during followed-up, pleural nodules or plaques found in medical thoracoscopy. One year of clinical follow-up for patients found to have nonspecific pleurisy is likely sufficient.