Literature DB >> 26788765

Regional Heterogeneity of Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease Phenotypes: Pulmonary (3)He Magnetic Resonance Imaging and Computed Tomography.

Damien Pike1,2, Miranda Kirby3, Rachel L Eddy1,2, Fumin Guo1,4, Dante P I Capaldi1,2, Alexei Ouriadov1, David G McCormack5, Grace Parraga1,2,4.   

Abstract

Pulmonary ventilation may be visualized and measured using hyperpolarized (3)He magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) while emphysema and its distribution can be quantified using thoracic computed tomography (CT). Our objective was to phenotype ex-smokers with COPD based on the apical-to-basal distribution of ventilation abnormalities and emphysema to better understand how these phenotypes change regionally as COPD progresses. We evaluated 100 COPD ex-smokers who provided written informed consent and underwent spirometry, CT and (3)He MRI. (3)He MRI ventilation imaging was used to quantify the ventilation defect percent (VDP) for whole-lung and individual lung lobes. Regional VDP was used to generate the apical-lung (AL)-to-basal-lung (BL) difference (ΔVDP); a positive ΔVDP indicated AL-predominant and negative ΔVDP indicated BL-predominant ventilation defects. Emphysema was quantified using the relative-area-of-the-lung ≤-950HU (RA950) of the CT density histogram for whole-lung and individual lung lobes. The AL-to-BL RA950 difference (ΔRA950) was generated with a positive ΔRA950 indicating AL-predominant emphysema and a negative ΔRA950 indicating BL-predominant emphysema. Seventy-two ex-smokers reported BL-predominant MRI ventilation defects and 71 reported AL-predominant CT emphysema. BL-predominant ventilation defects (AL/BL: GOLD I = 18%/82%, GOLD II = 24%/76%) and AL-predominant emphysema (AL/BL: GOLD I = 84%/16%, GOLD II = 72%/28%) were the major phenotypes in mild-moderate COPD. In severe COPD there was a more uniform distribution for ventilation defects (AL/BL: GOLD III = 40%/60%, GOLD IV = 43%/57%) and emphysema (AL/BL: GOLD III = 64%/36%, GOLD IV = 43%/57%). Basal-lung ventilation defects predominated in mild-moderate GOLD grades, and a more homogeneous distribution of ventilation defects was observed in more advanced grade COPD; these differences suggest that over time, regional ventilation abnormalities become more homogenously distributed during disease progression.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Airways disease; COPD; computed tomography; emphysema; magnetic resonance imaging; phenotypes

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2016        PMID: 26788765     DOI: 10.3109/15412555.2015.1123682

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  COPD        ISSN: 1541-2563            Impact factor:   2.409


  6 in total

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Authors:  Wei Zha; Sean B Fain; Mark L Schiebler; Michael D Evans; Scott K Nagle; Fang Liu
Journal:  J Magn Reson Imaging       Date:  2019-04-04       Impact factor: 4.813

Review 2.  The role of hyperpolarized 129xenon in MR imaging of pulmonary function.

Authors:  Lukas Ebner; Jeff Kammerman; Bastiaan Driehuys; Mark L Schiebler; Robert V Cadman; Sean B Fain
Journal:  Eur J Radiol       Date:  2016-09-16       Impact factor: 3.528

3.  Regional Heterogeneity of Lobar Ventilation in Asthma Using Hyperpolarized Helium-3 MRI.

Authors:  Wei Zha; Stanley J Kruger; Robert V Cadman; David G Mummy; Michael D Evans; Scott K Nagle; Loren C Denlinger; Nizar N Jarjour; Ronald L Sorkness; Sean B Fain
Journal:  Acad Radiol       Date:  2017-11-23       Impact factor: 3.173

4.  CT-Based Local Distribution Metric Improves Characterization of COPD.

Authors:  Benjamin A Hoff; Esther Pompe; Stefanie Galbán; Dirkje S Postma; Jan-Willem J Lammers; Nick H T Ten Hacken; Leo Koenderman; Timothy D Johnson; Stijn E Verleden; Pim A de Jong; Firdaus A A Mohamed Hoesein; Maarten van den Berge; Brian D Ross; Craig J Galbán
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2017-06-07       Impact factor: 4.379

5.  Time-series hyperpolarized xenon-129 MRI of lobar lung ventilation of COPD in comparison to V/Q-SPECT/CT and CT.

Authors:  Ozkan Doganay; Tahreema Matin; Mitchell Chen; Minsuok Kim; Anthony McIntyre; Daniel R McGowan; Kevin M Bradley; Thomas Povey; Fergus V Gleeson
Journal:  Eur Radiol       Date:  2018-12-14       Impact factor: 5.315

Review 6.  Lung MRI with hyperpolarised gases: current & future clinical perspectives.

Authors:  Neil J Stewart; Laurie J Smith; Ho-Fung Chan; James A Eaden; Smitha Rajaram; Andrew J Swift; Nicholas D Weatherley; Alberto Biancardi; Guilhem J Collier; David Hughes; Gill Klafkowski; Christopher S Johns; Noreen West; Kelechi Ugonna; Stephen M Bianchi; Rod Lawson; Ian Sabroe; Helen Marshall; Jim M Wild
Journal:  Br J Radiol       Date:  2021-06-09       Impact factor: 3.629

  6 in total

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