Abstract

Double-lumen endobronchial tubes (DLTs) are essential for differential lung ventilation during pulmonary lobectomy, but they are more rigid, longer, larger in diameter and irritable. Coughing at extubation sometimes causes airway and lung injury, which causes severe air leaks, prolonged cough and sore throat. We examined the prevalence of cough-associated air leaks at extubation and postoperative cough or sore throat after lobectomy and evaluated the efficacy of supraglottic airway (SGA) in preventing these complications. Patient characteristics and operative and postoperative factors data were collected from patients who underwent pulmonary lobectomy between January 2013 and March 2022. After propensity score matching, these data were compared between the SGA and DLT groups. A total of 1069 patients with lung cancer (SGA, 641; DLTs, 428) were enrolled and coughing at extubation occurred in 100 (23.4%) patients in the DLT group, 65 (65.0%) showed increased cough-associated air leaks at extubation and 20 (30.8%) showed prolonged air leaks. Coughing at extubation occurred in 6 (0.9%) in the SGA group. In 193 patients from each group after propensity score matching, coughing at extubation and the associated air leak increase were significantly lower in the SGA group. Visual analogue scale of postoperative cough and sore throat on postoperative days 2, 7 and 30 were significantly lower in the SGA group. SGA is effective and safe for preventing cough-associated air leaks and prolonged postoperative cough or sore throat at extubation following pulmonary lobectomy.

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