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Chest drainage insights

Driving Change: Proving Day 0 Drain Removal is Possible

Time to read: 2 min.

Emerging research using digital drainage protocols suggests that earlier removal may be not only possible, but beneficial in reducing pain, shortening hospital stays, and helping patients get back to normal life faster.

The Digital Drainage Revolution

Traditional chest drainage systems rely on subjective snap-shot assessments, often delaying removal. Digital chest drainage systems, such as Thopaz+, allow surgeons to monitor precise, real-time air leak data and trends using regulated pressure. This enables objective and reproducible removal criteria, leading to improved outcomes and reduced hospital costs.

Key Findings From Recent Studies

Removal Regardless Of Fluid Volume

Takamochi[1] and Khader[2] both support chest drain removal based primarily on air leak criteria, regardless of fluid volume (without blood or chyle). Using Thopaz+ suction settings of –15 to –20 cmH2O, both studies applied thresholds of ≤20 ml/min over 6–12 hours for safe removal. These approaches resulted in efficient postoperative recovery, shorter drainage duration, and reduced hospital length of stay.

Postoperative Day 0 (POD0) Removal

Both Pfeuty[3] and Alayche[4] demonstrate that chest drain removal on POD 0 is safe and effective following pulmonary resections. Using Thopaz+ suction settings of –8 to –20 cmH2O, their studies applied strict air leak criteria (<20–50 ml/min over several hours) to guide early removal. Patients in the early removal groups had notably short hospital stays—often just 1 day—highlighting the feasibility of POD0 removal in well-selected cases.

On-Table Drain Removal

Khader[1] and Liu[2] support the safety of on-table chest drain removal for patients undergoing sublobar/wedge lung resections or minor thoracic procedures. Despite differences in patient populations and drain types, both studies showed favorable outcomes with early removal—Khader reporting a median hospital stay of just 1 day, and Liu demonstrating significantly shorter stays for tubeless patients. These findings reinforce that with appropriate criteria, on-table removal is safe and effective.

The Future: Personalized Drain Management

The evidence is growing: with Thopaz+ and clear, objective criteria, early drain removal—even on the operating table—is safe for selected patients. Ongoing studies aim to refine optimal air leak thresholds, observation periods, and patient selection criteria for standardized digital drainage protocols.

Thopaz+ – Impact On Patient Recovery

  • Shorter hospital stays7
    Already in 2014, a multicenter randomized controlled trial showed a reduction in drainage duration by 1.1 days, leading to a significantly shortened length of stay by 1 day. In addition, Thopaz achieved higher satisfaction scores compared with traditional devices.
  • Proven economic value8,9
    Although digital systems require initial investment, Thopaz+ combined with a dedicated digital drain removal protocol has been shown to improve patient outcomes and reduce length of stay10. This translates into significant cost savings for hospitals, as demonstrated in a health economic analysis by Evans8 and a publication by Patel (2023)9.
References

[1] Takamochi K, Haruki T, Oh S, et al. Early chest tube removal regardless of drainage volume after anatomic pulmonary resection: A multicenter, randomized, controlled trial. J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg 2024;168(2):401-10.

[2] Khader AA, Pons A, Palmares A, et al. Outcomes of chest drain management using only air leak (without fluid) criteria for removal after general thoracic surgery-a drainology study. J Thorac Dis. 2023 Jul 31;15(7):3776-3782. doi: 10.21037/jtd-22-1810.

[3] Pfeuty K, Rojas D, Iquille J, Lenot B. Postoperative day 1 discharge following subxiphoid thoracoscopic anatomical lung resection. European Journal of Cardio-Thoracic Surgery. 2024 Jun;65(6):ezae230.

[4] Alayche M, Choueiry J, Mekdachi A, et al. Determining optimal air leak resolution criteria when using digital pleural drainage device after lung resection. JTCVS Open 2024. DOI: 10.1016/j.xjon.2024.01.016.

[5] Khader AA, Pons A, Palmares A, et al. Are chest drains routinely required after thoracic surgery? A drainology study of on-table chest-drain removals. JTCVS open. 2023;16:960-4.

[6] Liu C, Hsu P, Leong K, Ka-I, et al. Is tubeless uniportal video-assisted thoracic surgery for pulmonary wedge resection a safe procedure? EJCTS 2020;58 (Supplement_1), i70-i76. DOI: 10.1093/ejcts/ezaa061.

[7] Pompili C, Detterbeck F, Papagiannopoulos K, et al. Multicenter international randomized comparison of objective and subjective outcomes between electronic and traditional chest drainage systems. Ann Thorac Surg 2014;98:490–6.

[8] Evans JM, Ray A, Dale M, et al. Thopaz+ portable digital system for managing chest drains: A NICE Medical Technology Guidance. Appl Health Econ Health Policy 2019;17(3):285–94.

[9] Patel C., Ruppert SD, Cao H, et al. Use of a Digital Air Leak Detection Device to Decrease Chest Tube Duration. Crit Care Nurse 2023;43(6):11-21.

[10] Pompili C, Detterbeck F, Papagiannopoulos K, et al. Multicenter international randomized comparison of objective and subjective outcomes between electronic and traditional chest drainage systems. Ann Thorac Surg 2014;98:490–6.

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