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Pleural infection represents a significant and ongoing challenge for patients, clinicians, and healthcare providers given the morbidity and mortality associated with this condition. Whilst our understanding of how pleural infection develops and how it should be treated has improved considerably over the past couple of decades, this has yet to translate into a meaningful positive impact on key outcomes. Making the diagnosis of pleural infection is not always straightforward, and the long-standing belief that it always occurs as a complication of lung parenchymal infection is being increasingly recognised as incorrect. Identifying the causative organism(s) is equally uncertain, with almost half of cases of pleural infection proving to be culture negative using traditional methods. Whilst we are now able to determine which patients are more likely to have a poor outcome from their pleural infection at the time of diagnosis, how this should affect their treatment pathway—including the role of more invasive strategies such as surgery or intrapleural enzyme therapy—is not yet known. This review article aims to summarise the existing evidence base and best clinical practice for the non-specialist, whilst highlighting recent research which has or will change the way we manage pleural infection, as well as those areas where further studies are still needed.

More information Original publication

DOI

10.3390/jcm14051685

Type

Journal article

Publisher

MDPI AG

Publication Date

2025-03-02T00:00:00+00:00

Volume

14

Pages

1685 - 1685

Total pages

0