| Literature DB >> 33176059 |
Shoko Nogami1, Naw Awn J-P1, Munenobu Nogami2, Tomomi Matsui1, Nlandu Roger Ngatu3, Taro Tamura4, Yukinori Kusaka5, Harumi Itoh5, Narufumi Suganuma1.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: The Asian Intensive Reader of Pneumoconiosis (AIR Pneumo) is a training program designed to improve diagnostic skills for chest radiographies (CXRs) in accordance with the ILO/ICRP 2000. The purpose was to determine the prevalence of occupational environmental pulmonary disease findings in construction workers on thin-slice computed tomography (thin-slice CT), and to compare the diagnostic performance with CXR evaluated by AIR Pneumo-trained physicians.Entities:
Keywords: chest radiography; computed tomography; pleural plaque; pneumoconiosis; sensitivity
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33176059 PMCID: PMC7384989 DOI: 10.1002/1348-9585.12141
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Occup Health ISSN: 1341-9145 Impact factor: 2.708
Low‐dose thin‐slice CT finding of 97 construction workers
| Findings | Number (%) |
|---|---|
| Parenchyma | |
| Irregular opacities | 9 (9.3%) |
| Ground glass opacities | 1 (1.0%) |
| Emphysema | 18 (18.6%) |
| Honeycombing | 1 (1.0%) |
| Lung cancer | 1 (1.0%) |
| Pleura | |
| Pleural plaque | 44 (45.4%) |
| Pleural calcification | 6 (6.2%) |
The proportion of chest x‐ray readings that agreed with CT‐proven gold standard among the 97 construction workers
| Number of CXR readers | Number of detected cases in CXR (%) | |
|---|---|---|
| Irregular opacities | ||
| Cut‐off level | 0/1 or greater | 1/0 or greater |
| Sensitivity (in 9 positive cases) | ||
| 4 readers | 2 (22.2%) | 2 (22.2%) |
| 3 or more readers | 3 (33.3%) | 2 (22.2%) |
| 2 or more readers | 3 (33.3%) | 3 (33.3%) |
| 1 or more readers | 6 (66.6%) | 4 (44.4%) |
| Specificity (in 88 negative cases) | ||
| 4 readers | 80 (90.9%) | 82 (93.2%) |
| 3 or more readers | 88 (100%) | 88 (100%) |
| Plaque | ||
| Sensitivity (in 45 positive cases) | ||
| 4 readers | 4 (9.1%) | |
| 3 or more readers | 7 (15.9%) | |
| 2 or more readers | 14 (31.8%) | |
| 1 or more readers | 19 (43.2%) | |
| Specificity (in 52 negative cases) | ||
| 4 readers | 41 (77.4%) | |
| 3 or more readers | 49 (92.5%) | |
| 2 or more readers | 51 (96.2%) | |
| 1 or more readers | 52 (100%) | |
Chest x‐ray readings for irregular opacities were dichotomized at cut‐off level of 0/1 or 1/0.
FIGURE 1The diagnostic performance of the readers (A: NIOSH B reader, an occupational health physician; B: AIR Pneumo‐trained occupational health physician with 6 y of experience; C and D: AIR Pneumo‐trained physicians with 6 and 1 y of experience, respectively). (a) Sensitivity of detecting irregular opacities on chest radiography, (b) Sensitivity of detecting pleural plaques on chest radiography, (c) Specificity of detecting irregular opacities on chest radiography, and (d) Specificity of detecting pleural plaques on chest radiography, against thin‐slice CT as a reference standard
FIGURE 2Discrepancy between chest radiography and thin‐slice CT reading results (Case 1). CT‐proven subtle pleural plaque (white arrow) was not detected on chest radiography (black arrow) by any of the readers
FIGURE 3Discrepancy between chest radiography and thin‐slice CT reading results (Case 2). Old pleurisy misclassified as pleural plaque by a NIOSH B reader and an AIR Pneumo reader (black arrow). Another AIR Pneumo reader correctly classified this as diffuse pleural thickening, pleural abnormalities continued from cost‐phrenic angle obliteration. As the costophrenic angle obliteration is very subtle on chest radiography, it will be very difficult to detect CT‐proven pleurisy (white arrow)
FIGURE 4Discrepancy between chest radiography and thin‐slice CT reading results (Case 3). CT‐proven fractured rib (white arrow) misclassified as pleural plaques by three AIR Pneumo readers. A NIOSH B reader correctly classified this (black arrow) as fractured rib