Background: The decision to drain parapneumonic pleural effusion in children is still controversial. An indicative scoring system to assess the need for chest-tube drainage arose from a partnership between pediatricians and surgeons.
Objective: To evaluate the utility of the score in indicating whether drainage should be performed in pediatric patients with parapneumonic effusion.
Method: A cross-sectional study involving 250 inpatients with parapneumonic effusion, treated in a tertiary-care hospital between 1994 and 1999. The following variables were analyzed: clinical presentation, chest X-rays, pleural fluid culture and biochemical analysis of the pleural fluid, as well as the score and treatment. The score was based on four categories: general appearance of the pleural fluid, chest X-rays, laboratory findings, and the second thoracentesis. Drainage was recommended for patients scoring higher than 5.5.
Results: Of 941 children with pneumonia, parapneumonic effusion occurred in 304 (32.2%), 250 of which were included in the study. Of those, 146 (58.4%) were male, with mean of age of 3 years (median, 2 years). The cutoff points (determined through receiver operating characteristic curve analysis) for suggesting pleural drainage were pH < 7.29 (89.2% sensitivity and 76.5% specificity), score > 5.0 (68.7% sensitivity and 81.7% specificity). These values were more strongly correlated with the need for drainage (p = 0.001), as were those reported in the literature (pH = 7.0 and glucose < 40). The lactate dehydrogenase did not prove to be a good parameter for indicating a need for drainage.
Conclusion: In addition to the purulent aspect, pH = 7.29 and score were the best indicators of the need for chest-tube drainage in pediatric patients with parapneumonic effusion. However, we suggest that some score variables be readjusted to improve the usefulness of this particular scoring system.
Keywords: Empyema. Pleural effusion. Pneumonia.