We read with interest the publication by Sidhu et al. in the July 2024 issue of Internal Medicine Journal: 'Management of malignant pleural effusion and trapped lung: a survey of respiratory physicians and thoracic surgeons in Australasia'. We thank these authors for this valuable work, which identified the insertion of indwelling pleural catheters (IPCs) to be the preferred treatment for trapped lung, irrespective of patient prognosis. 1 The authors found the main perceived disadvantage associated with IPCs to be the lack of suitable drainage care services and identified heterogeneity of management for malignant pleural effusion management in Australasia. We wish to contribute and share our successful drainage care service, which is an innovative interdisciplinary model, provided across a multicentre tertiary health network in metropolitan Melbourne.Since 2018, our palliative care supported hospital-inthe-home (HITH) service has provided care to 110 patients with IPCs for recurrent malignant (n = 100, 90%) and non-malignant effusions. Fifty-eight (52.7%) patients were female with a mean age of 69.7 years (range 30-91). Patients must reside within our HITH catchment area and be referred for catheter insertion by Cardiothoracic, Respiratory, Oncology or Palliative Care units. Once an IPC is inserted, patients are admitted to