| Literature DB >> 25960647 |
Gianna Camiciottoli1, Stefano Diciotti2, Francesca Bigazzi1, Simone Lombardo3, Maurizio Bartolucci4, Matteo Paoletti1, Mario Mascalchi3, Massimo Pistolesi1.
Abstract
A substantial proportion of patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) develops various degree of intrathoracic tracheal collapsibility. We studied whether the magnitude of intrathoracic tracheal collapsibility could be different across clinical phenotypes and sex in COPD. Intrathoracic tracheal collapsibility measured at paired inspiratory-expiratory low dose computed tomography (CT) and its correlation with clinical, functional, and CT-densitometric data were investigated in 69 patients with COPD according to their predominant conductive airway or emphysema phenotypes and according to sex. Intrathoracic tracheal collapsibility was higher in patients with predominant conductive airway disease (n=28) and in females (n=27). Women with a predominant conductive airway phenotype (n=10) showed a significantly greater degree of collapsibility than women with predominant emphysema (28.9%±4% versus 11.6%±2%; P<0.001). Intrathoracic tracheal collapsibility was directly correlated with inspiratory-expiratory volume variation at CT and with forced expiratory volume (1 second), and inversely correlated with reduced CT lung density and functional residual capacity. Intrathoracic tracheal collapsibility was not correlated with cough and wheezing; however, intrathoracic tracheal collapsibility and clinical phenotypes of COPD are closely correlated. In patients with a predominant emphysematous phenotype, a reduced collapsibility may reflect the mechanical properties of the stiff hyperinflated emphysematous lung. The high collapsibility in patients with predominant airway disease, mild airway obstruction, and in women with this phenotype may reflect chronic airway inflammation. The lack of relationship with such symptoms as wheezing, cough, and dyspnea could indicate that intrathoracic tracheal collapsibility itself should be considered neither an abnormal feature of COPD nor a relevant clinical finding.Entities:
Keywords: airway; computed tomography; lung density; lung volumes; pulmonary function
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25960647 PMCID: PMC4423505 DOI: 10.2147/COPD.S80558
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Chron Obstruct Pulmon Dis ISSN: 1176-9106
Figure 1Application of the proposed algorithms on the CT scans of a COPD patient.
Notes: For the sake of simplicity, the results (in red) are superimposed on a CT slice at about 1 cm above the carina (A–D) and at a lower level (E and F). Inspiratory CT slices are shown on the top row, whereas corresponding expiratory CT slices are on the bottom row. Panels A and B show the lung segmentation results employed for lung volume computation (delta volume =0.42). Panels C and D show trachea segmentation results used to measure tracheal collapsibility (35.8%). Panels E and F display the lung area with density values below −950 Hounsfield units in the inspiratory scan (%LAA−950insp =5.6%) and below −910 Hounsfield units in the expiratory scan (%LAA−910exp =4.1%).
Abbreviations: COPD, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease; CT, computed tomography.
Anthropometric data, smoke exposure, pulmonary function, and presence of purulent sputum in 69 patients with COPD subdivided according to the predominant mechanism of air flow limitation and sex
| All patients (n=69) | Predominant airway phenotype (n=28) | Predominant emphysema phenotype (n=41) | Males (n=42) | Females (n=27) | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age (years) | 67±9 | 66±8 | 66±10 | NS | 67±9 | 66±9 | NS |
| BMI (kg/m2) | 25±4 | 27±4 | 24±4 | <0.01 | 25±4 | 25±4 | NS |
| Packs/year | 42±23 | 35±24 | 47±22 | <0.05 | 41±18 | 44±30 | NS |
| FEV1% | 61±27 | 73±23 | 53±26 | <0.001 | 54±25 | 73±25 | <0.01 |
| FRC% | 126±31 | 111±25 | 137±30 | <0.001 | 131±33 | 120±24 | NS |
| DLCO% | 69±22 | 85±18 | 57±16 | <0.0001 | 67±22 | 69±21 | NS |
| Presence of purulent sputum | 16/69 | 12/28 | 4/41 | <0.01 | 11/42 | 5/27 | NS |
Notes: Data are mean ± SD for continuous variables and proportion for categorical values. Sputum purulence (entered as 1 when present and 0 when absent in the regression equation employed to phenotype patients with COPD). Packs/year is the mean number of daily cigarettes × number of years/20.
Abbreviations: BMI, body mass index (weight/height2); COPD, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease; DLCO%, lung diffusing capacity for carbon monoxide (% of predicted); FEV1%, forced expiratory volume in one second (% of predicted); FRC%, functional residual capacity (% of predicted); NS, not significant; SD, standard deviation.
CT quantitative densitometric data, airway wall thickness, inspiratory–expiratory volume variation, and tracheal collapsibility in 69 patients with COPD subdivided according to the predominant mechanism of air flow limitation and sex
| All patients (n=69) | Predominant airway phenotype (n=28) | Predominant emphysema phenotype (n=41) | Males (n=42) | Females (n=27) | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| %LAA−950insp | 11.7±13 | 5±5 | 16.3±15 | <0.001 | 15±15 | 7±8 | <0.05 |
| %LAA−910exp | 12.7±15 | 4±0.1 | 16.9±16 | <0.01 | 16±16 | 7±11 | <0.05 |
| AWTPi10 (mm) | 3.84±0.11 | 3.85±0.12 | 3.83±0.08 | NS | 3.87±0.09 | 3.80±0.09 | <0.05 |
| Delta volume | 0.30±0.13 | 0.36±0.10 | 0.26±0.13 | 0.001 | 0.29±0.14 | 0.32±0.10 | NS |
| Tracheal collapsibility (%) | 14.4±12 | 19±13 | 11.4±10 | <0.01 | 12±10 | 18±14 | <0.05 |
Notes: Data are mean ± SD. Delta volume is ([inspiratory CT volume – expiratory CT volume]/inspiratory CT volume). Intrathoracic tracheal collapsibility (%) is ([inspiratory tracheal volume – expiratory tracheal volume]/inspiratory tracheal volume) ×100.
Abbreviations: AWTPi10 (mm), average wall thickness of an extrapolated airway with an internal perimeter of 10 mm; COPD, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease; CT, computed tomography; %LAA−910exp, percentage of total lung area with attenuation values below −910 Hounsfield units at maximal expiration; %LAA−950insp, percentage of total lung area with attenuation values below −950 Hounsfield units at maximal inspiration; NS, not significant; SD, standard deviation.
Relationships of intrathoracic tracheal collapsibility with functional parameters indicative of airflow obstruction and hyperinflation
| Intrathoracic tracheal collapsibility (%) | All patients (n=69) | Predominant airway phenotype (n=28) | Predominant emphysema phenotype (n=41) | Males (n=42) | Females (n=27) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| FEV1% | |||||
| FRC% | NS | NS | |||
Abbreviations: FEV1%, forced expiratory volume in one second (% of predicted); FRC%, functional residual capacity (% of predicted); NS, not significant.
Relationships of intrathoracic tracheal collapsibility with CT thresholds of lung inspiratory and expiratory density (%LAA−950insp and %LAA−910exp, respectively)
| Intrathoracic tracheal collapsibility (%) | All patients (n=69) | Predominant airway phenotype (n=28) | Predominant emphysema phenotype (n=41) | Males (n=42) | Females (n=27) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| %LAA−950insp | |||||
| NS | |||||
| %LAA−910exp | |||||
Abbreviations: CT, computed tomography; %LAA–910exp, percentage of total lung area with attenuation values below −910 Hounsfield units at maximal expiration; %LAA−950insp, percentage of total lung area with attenuation values below −950 Hounsfield units at maximal inspiration; NS, not significant.
Figure 2Relationship of intrathoracic tracheal collapsibility with delta volume ([inspiratory CT volume – expiratory CT volume]/inspiratory CT volume) in 69 patients with COPD (A); 28 of whom were classified as being affected by predominant airway disease (B); 41 of whom were classified as being affected by predominant emphysema (C); males (D); and females (E).
Abbreviations: COPD, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease; CT, computed tomography.
Figure 3Intrathoracic tracheal collapsibility in males and females with COPD according to predominant airway disease and predominant emphysema.
Note: **P<0.001 among females.
Abbreviation: COPD, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.
Predictive models of intrathoracic tracheal collapsibility by multivariate regression analysis of clinical history data (cough, wheezing, dyspnea), pulmonary function, and CT variables in the whole set of patients with COPD and in the examined subsets
| Estimates of intrathoracic tracheal collapsibility | Predictors | Coefficients | |
|---|---|---|---|
| All patients (n=69) | Delta volume | 49.6 | 0.70/0.49 |
| %LAA−910exp | −0.217 | ||
| Intercept | 2.176 | ||
| Predominant airway phenotype (n=28) | Delta volume | 75.26 | 0.60/0.36 |
| Intercept | −8.465 | ||
| Predominant emphysema phenotype (n=41) | Delta volume | 36.46 | 0.78/0.61 |
| BMI | 0.684 | ||
| FRC | −0.089 | ||
| Intercept | −2.445 | ||
| Males (n=42) | Delta volume | 36.49 | 0.69/0.48 |
| BMI | 0.648 | ||
| Intercept | −14.81 | ||
| Females (n=27) | Delta volume | 111.1 | 0.77/0.59 |
| Intercept | −17.96 |
Abbreviations: BMI, body mass index; COPD, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease; CT, computed tomography; FRC, functional residual capacity; %LAA−910exp, percentage of total lung area with attenuation values below −910 Hounsfield units at maximal expiration.