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<h4>Background</h4>Pleural infection remains an important cause of mortality. This study aimed to investigate worldwide patterns of pre-existing comorbidities and clinical outcomes of patients with pleural infection.<h4>Methods</h4>Studies reporting on adults with pleural infection between 2000 and 2017 were identified from a search of Embase and MEDLINE. Articles reporting exclusively on tuberculous, fungal or post-pneumonectomy infection were excluded. Two reviewers assessed 20 980 records for eligibility.<h4>Results</h4>211 studies met the inclusion criteria. 134 articles (227 898 patients, mean age 52.8 years) reported comorbidity and/or outcome data. The majority of studies were retrospective observational cohorts (n=104, 78%) and the most common region of reporting was East Asia (n=33, 24%) followed by North America (n=27, 20%). 85 articles (50 756 patients) reported comorbidity. The median (interquartile range (IQR)) percentage prevalence of any comorbidity was 72% (58-83%), with respiratory illness (20%, 16-32%) and cardiac illness (19%, 15-27%) most commonly reported. 125 papers (192 298 patients) reported outcome data. The median (IQR) length of stay was 19 days (13-27 days) and median in-hospital or 30-day mortality was 4% (IQR 1-11%). In regions with high-income economies (n=100, 74%) patients were older (mean 56.5 <i>versus</i> 42.5 years, p<0.0001), but there were no significant differences in prevalence of pre-existing comorbidity nor in length of hospital stay or mortality.<h4>Conclusion</h4>Patients with pleural infection have high levels of comorbidity and long hospital stays. Most reported data are from high-income economy settings. Data from lower-income regions is needed to better understand regional trends and enable optimal resource provision going forward.

Original publication

DOI

10.1183/13993003.00541-2019

Type

Journal article

Journal

The European respiratory journal

Publication Date

09/2019

Volume

54

Addresses

Oxford Centre for Respiratory Medicine, Oxford University Hospitals NHS Trust, Oxford, UK.

Keywords

Humans, Bacterial Infections, Communicable Diseases, Pleural Diseases, Chronic Disease, Anti-Bacterial Agents, Treatment Outcome, Length of Stay, Patient Admission, Registries, Hospital Mortality, Retrospective Studies, Chest Tubes, Comorbidity, Observational Studies as Topic