| Literature DB >> 35565580 |
Andrzej Łobaczewski1, Michał Czopowicz2, Agata Moroz2, Marcin Mickiewicz2, Rafał Sapierzyński3, Sylwia Tarka4, Tadeusz Frymus5, Wojciech Mądry6, Michał Buczyński6, Olga Szaluś-Jordanow5.
Abstract
The diagnostics of two of the most prevalent lung diseases in dogs, bacterial pneumonia (BP) and lung neoplasm (LN), are challenging as their clinical signs are identical and may also occur in extrapulmonary diseases. This study aims to identify ultrasonographic criteria and develop a lung ultrasound (LUS)-based diagnostic algorithm which could help distinguish between these two conditions. The study is carried out in 66 dyspneic dogs in which a heart disease was excluded using echocardiography. Based on imaging and laboratory diagnostic tests, as well as follow-up, the dogs are classified into LN (35 dogs) and BP (31 dogs) groups. LUS is performed at admission and the presence of seven lung abnormalities (pleural thickening, B-lines, subpleural consolidations, hepatization with or without aeration, nodule sign and mass classified together as a tumor, and free pleural fluid) and classification and regression trees are used to develop an LUS-based diagnostic algorithm. Distribution of all LUS abnormalities except for aerations differs significantly between groups; however, their individual differentiating potential is rather low. Therefore, we combine them in an algorithm which allows for definitive classification of 60 dogs (91%) (32 with LN and 28 with BP) with correct diagnosis of LN and BP in 31 dogs and 27 dogs, respectively.Entities:
Keywords: classification and regression trees; dyspnea; pulmonary disease; small animals; thorax
Year: 2022 PMID: 35565580 PMCID: PMC9101849 DOI: 10.3390/ani12091154
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Animals (Basel) ISSN: 2076-2615 Impact factor: 3.231
Figure 1Irregular and thickened pleural line.
Figure 2Multiple B-lines.
Figure 3Subpleural consolidations in the course of pneumonia.
Figure 4Subpleural consolidations in the course of lung cancer.
Figure 5Hepatization without aeration in the course of pneumonia.
Figure 6Hepatization without aeration in the course of lung cancer.
Figure 7Hepatization with aeration in the course of pneumonia (A–C) and lung cancer (D).
Figure 8Nodule sign in the course of lung cancer.
Figure 9Subpleural mass in the course of lung cancer. At the middle scan, biopsy needle is visible.
Figure 10Hepatization in the course of lung cancer and free fluid in thorax cavity.
Figure 11Lateral thoracic radiograph of a dog showing a large round shadow, occupying most of the caudal pulmonary field. The shadow was diagnosed as a primary solitary lung neoplasm in autopsy and was identified as adenocarcinoma in the histopathological examination.
Figure 12Lateral thoracic radiograph of a dog showing multiple small round shadows scattered in the entire cranial and caudal pulmonary fields. The shadows were diagnosed as a pulmonary metastasis of mammary gland neoplasm in the autopsy and were identified as carcinoma in the histopathological examination.
Demographic characteristic of the study population.
| Demographic Characteristics | Lung Neoplasm [LN] (n = 35) | Bacterial Pneumonia [BP] (n = 31) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Age a | 11, 10–13 (6–17) | 11, 8–14 (1–17) | 0.737 |
| Sex—males b | 16 (45.7) | 19 (61.3) | 0.205 |
| Pedigree b | 19 (54.3) | 25 (80.7) | 0.021 |
| Breed | German shepherd (3), Pointer (3), Poodle (2), dachshund, Boxer, cocker spaniel, Yorkshire terrier, rottweiler, miniature schnauzer, giant schnauzer, Doberman, Bernese mountain dog, whippet, golden retriever (1 each) | Yorkshire terrier (5), French bulldog (3), golden retriever (2), miniature pinscher (2), beagle, German shepherd, whippet, Pekinese, collie, WHWT, cocker spaniel, bloodhound, Staffordshire terrier, Labrador retriever, pug, Shih Tzu (1 each) |
a presented as median, IQR, and range. b presented as count and percentage.
Figure 13Distribution of lung ultrasound (LUS) abnormalities in dogs with lung neoplasm (LN) and bacterial pneumonia (BP). The number of dogs with a given LUS abnormality in a group is presented in the center of each bar. Whiskers correspond to the 95% confidence interval (CI 95%). Asterisks (*) indicate a group with significantly higher prevalence of a given LUS abnormality according to the maximum likelihood G-test.
Comparison between the definitive diagnosis and lung ultrasound (LUS) abnormalities.
| LUS Abnormality | The Number (%) of Dogs with | G-Test | Youden’s Index | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lung Neoplasm [LN] (n = 35) | Bacterial Pneumonia [BP] (n = 31) | |||
| B-lines | ||||
| Any quadrant affected indicates BP | 24 (68.6) | 28 (90.3) * | 0.027 | 21.8 (12.3–31.2) |
| ≥3 quadrants affected indicate BP | 14 (40.0) | 24 (77.4) * | 0.002 | 37.4 (26.2–48.6) |
| Subpleural consolidations | ||||
| Any quadrant affected indicates BP | 21 (60.0) | 27 (87.1) * | 0.012 | 27.1 (16.9–37.3) |
| ≥3 quadrants affected indicate BP | 8 (22.9) | 24 (77.4) * | <0.001 | 54.6 (44.2–64.9) |
| Aerations | ||||
| Any quadrant affected indicates BP | 6 (17.1) | 9 (29.0) | 0.250 | - |
| Pleural thickening | ||||
| Any quadrant affected indicates BP | 18 (51.4) | 25 (80.7) * | 0.012 | 29.2 (18.2–40.2) |
| ≥3 quadrants affected indicate BP | 9 (25.7) | 22 (71.0) * | <0.001 | 45.3 (34.3–56.3) |
| Tumor | ||||
| Any quadrant affected indicates LN | 25 (71.4) * | 0 | <0.001 | 71.4 (63.8–79.1) |
| Hepatization | ||||
| Any quadrant affected indicates LN | 17 (48.6) * | 4 (12.9) | 0.001 | 35.7 (25.3–46.0) |
| Free pleural fluid | ||||
| Any quadrant affected indicates LN | 14 (40.0) * | 3 (9.7) | 0.004 | 30.3 (20.5–40.2) |
* significantly higher at α = 0.05.
Figure 14The number of quadrants in which a given lung ultrasound (LUS) abnormality was detected in dogs with lung neoplasm (LN, n = 35) and bacterial pneumonia (BP, n = 31). Bars, boxes, and whiskers correspond to the median, interquartile range (IQR), and range, respectively. Asterisks (*) indicate a group with significantly higher number of quadrants affected by a given LUS abnormality according to the Mann–Whitney U test.
Figure 15A Classification and Regression Tree (CART) for differentiation between lung neoplasm (LN) and bacterial pneumonia (BP) in dyspneic dogs without heart disease based on three lung ultrasound (LUS) abnormalities—tumor, hepatization, and subpleural consolidations. LR+ and LR- stand for positive and negative likelihood ratio, respectively. CI 95% is a 95% confidence interval.