# A National Evaluation of Intercostal Chest Drain Removal Strategies

**Authors:** Niki Veale, Anthony W. Martinelli, Dheeraj Sethi, Phillip De Souza, Khaing Zar Mon, Joyce Oi Suet Cheng, David Morrow, May Sam, Irfan Saleem, Kay Por Yip, Jennifer Kerks, David Henshall, Tobias Smitherman-Cairns, Katherine Smith, Daniel Mitchell, Karl Jackson, Benjamin Pippard, Seemab Paul, Waheed Mohammad, James Hyman, Benjamin Rowlands, Samantha Bosence, Catharine Pearce, Ben Probyn, Richard Thorley, Matthew Mitchell, Andrew Griffiths, Richard Westley, Abdullah Bin Huda, Asim Mehmood, Abid Khan, Vern Tee, Rachel Crooks, Paul Minnis, Lewis Standing, Wei Hann Ong, M. Salman Rashid, Ahmed Salih, Eve Lynn Koh, Ching Khai Ho, Yiwen Soo, Matthew Hayes, Clodagh Holmes, Fatima Al-Arrayed, Abeer Saad, Beenish Iqbal, Sam Trewick, Patrick Goodley, Jonathan Oldershaw, Elizabeth Thompson, Alexandra Hodge, Mohamed Gadallah, Rahul Bhat, Eleanor Barton, Anand Sundaralingam, Osei Kankam, James Quinn, John P. Corcoran, Steven P. Walker, Avinash Aujayeb, Jurgen Herre, Akhilesh Jha, Stefan J. Marciniak, Najib M. Rahman, Rob J. Hallifax

PMC · DOI: 10.1016/j.chest.2025.10.027 · 2025-11-04

## TL;DR

This study evaluates different strategies for removing chest drains in patients with pneumothorax and finds that clamping does not significantly reduce recurrence rates.

## Contribution

The study provides empirical evidence on the effectiveness of ICD removal strategies in reducing pneumothorax recurrence.

## Key findings

- Clamping trials did not significantly reduce pneumothorax recurrence compared to nonclamped groups.
- Digital air leak devices combined with clamping showed the lowest recurrence rates, though this approach was rare.
- Recurrent pneumothorax after ICD removal is a common complication, affecting 13% of patients within 30 days.

## Abstract

Management of spontaneous pneumothorax often involves intercostal chest drain (ICD) insertion. Determining when to remove the ICD is controversial, with significant variation in practice. Establishing optimal ICD management in pneumothorax could reduce morbidity and improve cost-effectiveness.

Do ICD removal strategies, including clamping and use of digital air leak devices, impact the risk of pneumothorax recurrence, need for repeat pleural procedures, or length of stay?

We conducted a multicenter retrospective analysis of patients requiring ICD insertion for spontaneous pneumothorax from May 2021 to October 2023. Data were collected on demographics, clinical course, ICD removal strategy, pneumothorax recurrence (early and late), and repeat pleural intervention.

A total of 791 admissions from 27 centers were included. The 30-day recurrence of pneumothorax was 13.0% (n = 103). Clamping trials were undertaken in 32.6% of cases (n = 258), but recurrence of pneumothorax was not significantly different in clamped compared with nonclamped groups (14.0% vs 12.6%, respectively; P = .67). Clamping identified pleural air reaccumulation in 24 episodes (9.3% of the clamped group). Of 234 cases where clamping did not identify air leak, 35 patients (15.0%) developed recurrent pneumothorax. Of the 533 patients whose drains were not clamped, 67 (12.6% of the group) developed recurrence. The median length of stay was 6 (clamped) vs 5 days (nonclamped) (P = .08). Adverse events associated with clamping were few (n = 6), but included tension pneumothorax (n = 1). Digital air leak devices combined with clamping resulted in the lowest rates of pneumothorax recurrence; however, this approach was rare (n = 24, 0.0% recurrence within 7 days).

Our results indicate that recurrent pneumothorax after ICD removal is a common complication. Clamping trials are safe but do not appear to be associated with reduced rates of recurrent pneumothorax. An ultracautious approach using digital air leak devices in combination with clamping could represent a viable strategy in selected patients.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** pneumothorax (MONDO:0002076)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** pneumothorax (MESH:D011030), air leak (MESH:D004618)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

3 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12975392/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12975392