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      Relationship of pleural fluid pH and glucose: a multi-centre study of 2,971 cases

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          Abstract

          Background

          Pleural fluid pH and glucose levels are both recommended in the workup of pleural effusions. Whether their levels correlate and predict each other or contribute independent knowledge is unclear. We aimed to investigate the pH/glucose relationship, assess their concordance and ascertain whether performing both tests provides additional information to performing either test alone.

          Methods

          The pH and glucose measurements from 2,971 pleural fluid samples, from three centers in Spain, UK and Australia, were categorized into Cancer (n=1,045), Infection (n=544), Tuberculosis (n=249) and Others (n=1,133) groups. The relationship between pH and glucose values and their concordance at clinically relevant cutoffs (pH 7.2 and glucose 3.3 mmol/L) were assessed.

          Results

          The mean pH of the cohort was 7.38 (SD 0.22) and median glucose 5.99 (range, 0.00–29.36) mmol/L. A regression model of the relationship between glucose (log-transformed) and pH with a restricted cubic spline showed linear (P<0.01) and nonlinear effects (P<0.01). The relationship was strong with a narrow confidence interval but the prediction interval was wide. Most (91.9%) samples were concordant using pH and glucose levels at cutoffs of 7.20 and 3.30 mmol/L respectively. Using pH alone, without glucose, captured 95.0% of the infection-related effusions with either pH or glucose below cutoff and glucose alone identified 91.7%.

          Conclusions

          Pleural fluid pH and glucose have a strong non-linear relationship but, in most situations, the level of one cannot accurately predict the other. Concordance rates were high and either test is sufficient in the majority of cases.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          J Thorac Dis
          J Thorac Dis
          JTD
          Journal of Thoracic Disease
          AME Publishing Company
          2072-1439
          2077-6624
          January 2019
          January 2019
          : 11
          : 1
          : 123-130
          Affiliations
          [1 ]Pleural Medicine Unit, Institute for Respiratory Health , Perth, Australia;
          [2 ]School of Medicine & Pharmacology, University of Western Australia, WA, Australia;
          [3 ]Respiratory Department, Sir Charles Gairdner Hospital , Perth, Australia;
          [4 ]Centre for Applied Statistics, University of Western Australia, WA, Australia;
          [5 ]School of Population and Global Health, University of Western Australia, WA, Australia;
          [6 ] Holy Spirit Northside Hospital , Brisbane, QLD, Australia;
          [7 ] Wellington Regional Hospital , Wellington, New Zealand;
          [8 ]Pleural Medicine Unit, Arnau de Vilanova University Hospital , Lleida, Spain;
          [9 ] North Bristol Lung Centre , Bristol, UK.
          Author notes

          Contributions: (I) Conception and design: YC Lee, NA Maskell, JM Porcel; (II) Administrative support: None; (III) Provision of study materials: SL Leong, A Rosenstengal, NA Smith, AO Clive; (IV) Collection and assembly of data: SL Leong, A Rosenstengal, NA Smith, AO Clive; (V) Data analysis and interpretation: CA Budgeon, K Murray, DB Fitzgerald, YC Lee, SL Leong; (VI) Manuscript writing: All authors; (VII) Final approval of the manuscript: All authors.

          Correspondence to: Prof. Y. C. Gary Lee. UWA School of Medicine & Pharmacology, 533 Harry Perkins Building, QE II Med Ctr, Perth, WA 6009, Australia. Email: gary.lee@ 123456uwa.edu.au .
          Article
          PMC6384369 PMC6384369 6384369 jtd-11-01-123
          10.21037/jtd.2018.12.101
          6384369
          30863580
          29cb6285-a53a-43b1-872a-7648dfc214a2
          2019 Journal of Thoracic Disease. All rights reserved.
          History
          : 17 July 2018
          : 29 November 2018
          Categories
          Original Article

          glucose,pleural effusion,empyema,hydrogen-ion concentration,Clinical decision making

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