Lobar Emphysema Distribution Is Associated With 5-Year Radiological Disease Progression

Boueiz A, Chang Y, Cho MH, Washko GR, epar RSJ e E, Bowler RP, Crapo JD, DeMeo DL, Dy JG, Silverman EK, et al. Lobar Emphysema Distribution Is Associated With 5-Year Radiological Disease Progression. Chest. 2018;153(1):65–76.

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Emphysema has considerable variability in its regional distribution. Craniocaudal emphysema distribution is an important predictor of the response to lung volume reduction. However, there is little consensus regarding how to define upper lobe-predominant and lower lobe-predominant emphysema subtypes. Consequently, the clinical and genetic associations with these subtypes are poorly characterized. METHODS: We sought to identify subgroups characterized by upper-lobe or lower-lobe emphysema predominance and comparable amounts of total emphysema by analyzing data from 9,210 smokers without alpha-1-antitrypsin deficiency in the Genetic Epidemiology of COPD (COPDGene) cohort. CT densitometric emphysema was measured in each lung lobe. Random forest clustering was applied to lobar emphysema variables after regressing out the effects of total emphysema. Clusters were tested for association with clinical and imaging outcomes at baseline and at 5-year follow-up. Their associations with genetic variants were also compared.
Last updated on 02/26/2023