Differentiating Lung Nodules Due to Coccidioides from Those Due to Lung Cancer Based on Radiographic Appearance

Author:

Peterson Michael W.12,Jain Ratnali1ORCID,Hildebrandt Kurt3,Carson William Keith3,Fayed Mohamed A.12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Fresno Department of Medicine, University of California (San Francisco), San Francisco, CA 93701, USA

2. UCSF Fresno/Community Medical Centers’ Multidisciplinary Lung Nodule Clinic, Fresno, CA 93701, USA

3. Community Medical Imaging Radiology Group, Fresno, CA 93721, USA

Abstract

Background: Coccidioidomycosis (cocci) is an endemic fungal disease that can cause asymptomatic or post-symptomatic lung nodules which are visible on chest CT scanning. Lung nodules are common and can represent early lung cancer. Differentiating lung nodules due to cocci from those due to lung cancer can be difficult and lead to invasive and expensive evaluations. Materials and Methods: We identified 302 patients with biopsy-proven cocci or bronchogenic carcinoma seen in our multidisciplinary nodule clinic. Two experienced radiologists who were blinded to the diagnosis read the chest CT scans and identified radiographic characteristics to determine their utility in differentiating lung cancer nodules from those due to cocci. Results: Using univariate analysis, we identified several radiographic findings that differed between lung cancer and cocci infection. We then entered these variables along with age and gender into a multivariate model and found that age, nodule diameter, nodule cavitation, presence of satellite nodules and radiographic presence of chronic lung disease differed significantly between the two diagnoses. Three findings, cavitary nodules, satellite nodules and chronic lung disease, have sufficient discrimination to potentially be useful in clinical decision-making. Conclusions: Careful evaluation of the three obtained radiographic findings can significantly improve our ability to differentiate benign coccidioidomycosis infection from lung cancer in an endemic region for the fungal disease. Using these data may significantly reduce the cost and risk associated with distinguishing the cause of lung nodules in these patients by preventing unnecessary invasive studies.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Plant Science,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics,Microbiology (medical)

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