Etiology of exudative pleural effusion among adults: differentiating between tuberculous and other causes, a multicenter prospective cohort study
Hussein M, Thomas M, Al-Tikrity M, Elarabi A, Hameed M, Al-Adab A, Ibrahim W, Chandra P, et al. (12 authors)
IJID regions · 2024-08
Abstract
Objectives Exudative pleural effusions have a broad etiology and usually necessitate further investigative workup, including invasive procedures. This study aimed to evaluate and compare the demographic, clinical, and biochemical characteristics of tuberculous, malignant, and chronic inflammatory pleural effusions. Methods This is a 2-year prospective cohort study of patients referred for medical thoracoscopy with an exudative pleural effusion. Results A total of 159 patients were enrolled in the study, with a mean age of 42.49 ± 13.8 years and the majority being males 121 (76.1%). As expected, patients with tuberculous effusions were significantly younger than those with non-tuberculous effusions (37.7 ± 10.9 vs 49.1 ± 14.9, P 9 /L ± 2.7 vs 9.0 × 10 9 /L ± 3.3, P = 0.004), higher total protein (76.2 g/dL ± 10.1 vs 70.2 g/dL ± 8.9, P P Conclusions Our study validates previous findings showing similar results in patients with tuberculous pleural effusions. A predictive model incorporating different demographic and clinical/laboratory characteristics may be useful in the early etiologic characterization of exudative pleural effusion.