Serial CT analysis in idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis: comparison of visual features that determine patient outcome

Author:

Jacob JosephORCID,Aksman Leon,Mogulkoc Nesrin,Procter Alex J,Gholipour Bahareh,Cross Gary,Barnett Joseph,Brereton Christopher JORCID,Jones Mark GORCID,van Moorsel Coline H,van Es Wouter,van Beek Frouke,Veltkamp Marcel,Desai Sujal R,Judge Eoin,Burd Teresa,Kokosi Maria,Savas Recep,Bayraktaroglu Selen,Altmann Andre,Wells Athol U

Abstract

AimsPatients with idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF) receiving antifibrotic medication and patients with non-IPF fibrosing lung disease often demonstrate rates of annualised forced vital capacity (FVC) decline within the range of measurement variation (5.0%–9.9%). We examined whether change in visual CT variables could help confirm whether marginal FVC declines represented genuine clinical deterioration rather than measurement noise.MethodsIn two IPF cohorts (cohort 1: n=103, cohort 2: n=108), separate pairs of radiologists scored paired volumetric CTs (acquired between 6 and 24 months from baseline). Change in interstitial lung disease, honeycombing, reticulation, ground-glass opacity extents and traction bronchiectasis severity was evaluated using a 5-point scale, with mortality prediction analysed using univariable and multivariable Cox regression analyses. Both IPF populations were then combined to determine whether change in CT variables could predict mortality in patients with marginal FVC declines.ResultsOn univariate analysis, change in all CT variables except ground-glass opacity predicted mortality in both cohorts. On multivariate analysis adjusted for patient age, gender, antifibrotic use and baseline disease severity (diffusing capacity for carbon monoxide), change in traction bronchiectasis severity predicted mortality independent of FVC decline. Change in traction bronchiectasis severity demonstrated good interobserver agreement among both scorer pairs. Across all study patients with marginal FVC declines, change in traction bronchiectasis severity independently predicted mortality and identified more patients with deterioration than change in honeycombing extent.ConclusionsChange in traction bronchiectasis severity is a measure of disease progression that could be used to help resolve the clinical importance of marginal FVC declines.

Funder

Medical Research Council

Wellcome Trust

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine

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