TAP-IT to Stop It
Have you ever had a moment where you were reading something, listening to an audio, or watching a video where you just had a moment of realization and absolutely stopped in your tracks? The reason is that you got hit with a discovery of some fact that you didn’t know. More than that, you realized what it meant. That’s what happened to me while listening to a podcast from a cardiologist about pulmonary effusion and how to treat it. Let’s start there.
Pulmonary effusion (PE) is the buildup of fluids in the connective tissue surrounding the lungs and the chest cavity. If enough fluid builds, it’s going to push on the lungs and ultimately push on the heart and make it very hard to breathe. To restore function, the fluid has to be removed. This happens to people who have congestive heart failure.
The TAP-IT study, formally called Thoracentesis to Alleviate Cardiac Pleural Effusion–Interventional Trial, was recently published in a leading heart journal. The researchers selected subjects who were 80+ years of age with less than a 25% ejection fraction. This population was chosen because they are the ones most likely to suffer from pleural effusion. They compared subjects who took diuretics to alleviate the fluid with subjects who got thoracentesis. The goal was to determine if there were any differences in outcomes as assessed by the number of days lived after beginning treatment.
The results? There were no differences in outcomes between the two groups. That’s amazing! Both reduced the pleural effusion, but there were differences in patient comfort and quality of life. As you might imagine, sticking a 2- to 5-inch needle through the rib space and into the pleural cavity to drain the fluid is going to be uncomfortable if not downright painful. There were also 20 out of 80 pneumothoraxes with the needle approach, while there were no complications noted in the group that took the medication.
The realization? This was the first randomized controlled trial that compared thoracentesis with diuretics, even though diuretics have been available for 75 years and thoracentesis for 175 years! Why did that matter to me? I’ll tell you on Saturday.
What are you prepared to do today?
Dr. Chet
Reference: Circulation. 2025 Apr 1;151(16):1150–1161