Effectiveness and safety of four drainage methods for lung abscess: a Bayesian network meta-analysis and systematic review
Xuxin Zhang, Yin Zheng, Lijian Pang, Xiaodong Lv, Ningzi Zang

TL;DR
This study compares four drainage methods for lung abscess and finds that ultrasound-guided drainage with antibiotics offers the best outcomes for recovery time and symptom resolution.
Contribution
The study introduces a Bayesian network meta-analysis to evaluate the comparative effectiveness and safety of four lung abscess drainage methods.
Findings
Ultrasound-guided drainage + antibiotics showed the best results for reducing hospital stay and resolving symptoms like cough and fever.
CT-guided drainage + antibiotics had the highest probability of effectiveness in overall treatment success.
Modified postural drainage + antibiotics was most effective for lesion reduction.
Abstract
To compare the efficacy and safety of various pus drainage methods for lung abscess via network meta-analysis. Randomized controlled trials (RCTs) from PubMed, Embase, Scopus, Web of Science, VIP, Wanfang, and CNKI were searched up to April 2025. Study quality was assessed using the Cochrane Risk of Bias Tool (v5.4.0). Bayesian network meta-analysis was conducted using Rstudio (v4.4.1). A total of 23 RCTs (1,453 patients) evaluating four drainage techniques were included. Effective rate: CT-guided percutaneous drainage + antibiotics ranked highest (77% probability), outperforming antibiotics alone (OR = 5.4) and conventional postural drainage + antibiotics (OR = 7.4). Hospital stay: Ultrasound-guided drainage + antibiotics ranked best (89% probability), significantly reducing stay versus conventional postural drainage + antibiotics (MD = –19 days). Symptom resolution:…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPleural and Pulmonary Diseases · Amoebic Infections and Treatments · Otolaryngology and Infectious Diseases
