Chylothorax
Appearance
Accumulation of chyle in the pleural space
(chylous ascites, chylous pericardial effusion)
Aetiology
[edit | edit source]- Traumatic
- Blunt
- Penetrating
- Iatrogenic
- Catheterisation, particularly subclavian vein
- Post-surgical (damage to thoracic duct)
- Excision of cervical/supraclavicular lymph nodes
- Radical lymph node dissections of the neck or chest
- Lung, oesophageal or mediastinal resection
- Thoracic aneurysm repair
- Sympathectomy
- Congenital cardiovascular surgery
- Neoplasms
- Lymphoma, lung, oesophageal or mediastinal neoplasms
- Metastatic carcinoma
- Infectious
- Tuberculous lymphadenosis
- Mediastinitis
- Ascending lymphangitis
- Other
- Lymphangioleiomyomatosis
- Venous thrombosis
- Congenital
Pathophysiology
[edit | edit source]- Extravasation from the thoracic duct
- Chyle
- A milky white fluid with a high concentration of triglycerides and chylomicrons and white blood cells
- Majority from dietary fat absorption, most of which is in the form of long chain fatty triglycerides
- Short and medium chain triglycerides are mostly absorbed through portal venous system and hence don't affect thoracic duct flow as much
- Chylomicrons travel through the lymphatic system over the course of several hours after a meal, and are then deposited into the venous system
- Nutritionally rich, depending on the nutritional and dietary status of the patient
- Can be clear
- Causes loss of fat and protein which often causes nutritional problems
- Malnutrition - loss of energy, fat, and fat-soluble vitamins, and immunoglobulin and immune cells
- Immune compromise (increased risk of bacterial infection)
- Impaired wound healing
- Volume of leak typically 0.5-3L per day
- Increased by peristalsis and even water intake
- However chyle output mainly comes from long chain triglycerides
- Chyle does not contain fibrinogen, so even small injuries to the duct will not heal
Presentation
[edit | edit source]- Dyspnoea/cough
- Milky white chest tube output - usually becomes evident after diet/feeds introduced
- Neutropaenia, lymphocytopaenia, antibody loss, infection/sepsis, albumin loss, malnutrition
Diagnosis
[edit | edit source]- Triglyceride level of drain output - a level >1.2mmol/L is diagnostic of a chyle leak
- Chylomicrons is gold standard but takes longer to come back
Management
[edit | edit source]- Approach
- Treat underlying condition
- Manage nutrition
- Low-output chylothorax (<1L/day) - often medical chylothorax or minor trauma to thoracic duct/tributaries - step-up approach with initial medical management, unless you suspect that won't work
- High-output chylothorax (>1L/day) - often surgical injuries to main thoracic duct or cirrhosis - early intervention, within a few days of diagnosis, is often favoured, as these injuries are less likely to heal spontaneously
- Nutritional management (from Austin chyle leak guidelines 2023)
- All patients need dietician involvement and nutritional assessment - identify pre-existing malnutrition, and prescribe an appropriate nutritional regimen to minimise chyle flow and maintain residual nutritional requirements
- Consider energy losses from chyle output (840kJ/L) and protein losses (20-30g/L)
- There are no RCTs which demonstrate an acceptable dietary fat intake to promote healing of the injury. Austin guideline says to give <20g long chain triglycerides per day for 3 weeks (or 2 weeks after resolution of the leak). UTD says aim <10g fat/day.
- Monitor for signs of essential fatty acid deficiency if on fat-free diet for >2 weeks (skin lesions, eczema, impaired wound healing, thrombocytopenia)
- Well-nourished patients with chyle leak <1000mL/day
- Trial fat-free oral diet
- Fat-free nutritional supplements to meet energy and protein requirements
- Use some MCT oil/supplements to help meet requirements, but can't rely on them too much, as they cause GIT upset
- Oral: MCT oil (on PBS) - 4tbs/24 hours
- Oral or enteric: MCT procal - 5 sachets per day or Betaquik - 5x50mL doses/day
- If patients don't respond to a modified oral diet, TPN may be warranted, but in that case keep going with some enteral feeds
- Malnourished patients with chyle leak <1000mL/day
- Enteral feeding with fat-free formula up to two weeks
- After two weeks, need to change to low-fat elemental formula which contains a small amount of LCT to meet essential fatty acid and fat-soluble vitamin requirements (e.g. Vivonex)
- If patients not responding, TPN may be warranted
- Chyle leak >1000mL/day
- NBM with TPN to meet full nutritional requirements - enteral nutrition is unlikely to make much difference
- Can give TPN with impunity, as the phospholipid constituents pass directly into the venous circulation
- Other components of conservative management
- Drainage of pleural space
- Unnecessary with asymptomatic non-surgical patients with small effusions, unless symptomatic; patients with chylous ascites; and early post-op pneumonectomy patients without mediastinal shift
- Intermittent thoracentesis is appropriate for patients with medical chylothorax and slow reaccumulation
- Octreotide/somatostatin
- Inhibits gastric, pancreatic and biliary secretions, and inhibit absorption of chyle from the intestine
- Increases the probability of avoiding surgical repair in patients with low-volume leaks on TPN, as shown in systematic reviews
- Some suggest giving from the start with low-volume leaks, while others advise giving as a second-line therapy
- Limit to a trial of a few weeks
- Can be given subcutaneously (50-200mcg TDS for 2-14 days) or intravenous infusion (6mg/day for two weeks)
- Ensure lung is fully expanded
- When drainage is <250mL/day, challenge with a fatty meal
- Drainage of pleural space
- Surgery
- Indications (all relative)
- Failed conservative management
- High-output chylothorax (>1L/day)
- Some say, aim to operate between day 7 and 14
- Suspected or known injury to main thoracic duct, as opposed to tributaries (less likely to settle with conservative management)
- Older, frail or malnourished patients who may tolerate a trial of conservative management worse
- Technique
- Right thoracotomy or thoracoscopy and ligation of thoracic duct at level of diaphragm
- Place olive oil or ice cream via NGT intra-operatively to increase chyle leak and aid identification of leak point
- Can try suture ligation, clipping, gluing, flap coverage, or pleurodesis
- Emerging percutaneous techniques involving radiological needle cannulation and duct occlusion
- Right thoracotomy or thoracoscopy and ligation of thoracic duct at level of diaphragm
- Indications (all relative)
Prognosis
[edit | edit source]- 50-80% of post-op chylothorax resolves with conservative measures, with a high success rate in patients with <500mL/day