Laboratory of Experimental Medicine and Pediatrics, Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, University of Antwerp, Universiteitsplein 1, 2160, Wilrijk, Belgium.
Infla-Med Research Consortium of Excellence, University of Antwerp, Antwerp, Belgium.
BMC Pulm Med. 2021 Aug 4;21(1):256. doi: 10.1186/s12890-021-01622-3.
Functional Respiratory Imaging (FRI) combines HRCT scans with computational fluid dynamics to provide objective and quantitative information about lung structure and function. FRI has proven its value in pulmonary diseases such as COPD and asthma, but limited studies have focused on cystic fibrosis (CF). This study aims to investigate the relation of multiple FRI parameters to validated imaging parameters and classical respiratory outcomes in a CF population.
CF patients aged > 5 years scheduled for a chest CT were recruited in a cross-sectional study. FRI outcomes included regional airway volume, airway wall volume, airway resistance, lobar volume, air trapping and pulmonary blood distribution. Besides FRI, CT scans were independently evaluated by 2 readers using the CF-CT score. Spirometry and the 6-Minute Walk Test (6MWT) were also performed. Statistical tests included linear mixed-effects models, repeated measures correlations, Pearson and Spearman correlations.
39 CT scans of 24 (17M/7F) subjects were analyzed. Patients were 24 ± 9 years old and had a ppFEV of 71 ± 25% at the time of the first CT. All FRI parameters showed significant low-to-moderate correlations with the total CF-CT score, except for lobar volume. When considering the relation between FRI parameters and similar CF-CT subscores, significant correlations were found between parameters related to airway volume, air trapping and airway wall thickening. Air trapping, lobar volume after normal expiration and pulmonary blood distribution showed significant associations with all spirometric parameters and oxygen saturation at the end of 6MWT. In addition, air trapping was the only parameter related to the distance covered during 6MWT. A subgroup analysis showed considerably higher correlations in patients with mild lung disease (ppFEV ≥ 70%) compared to patients with moderate to severe lung disease (ppFEV < 70%) when comparing FRI to CF-CT scores.
Multiple structural characteristics determined by FRI were associated with abnormalities determined by CF-CT score. Air trapping and pulmonary blood distribution appeared to be the most clinically relevant FRI parameters for CF patients due to their associations with classical outcome measures. The FRI methodology could particularly be of interest for patients with mild lung disease, although this should be confirmed in future research.
功能呼吸成像(FRI)将高分辨率 CT 扫描与计算流体动力学相结合,提供有关肺结构和功能的客观和定量信息。FRI 已在 COPD 和哮喘等肺部疾病中证明了其价值,但有限的研究集中在囊性纤维化(CF)上。本研究旨在调查 CF 人群中多个 FRI 参数与经过验证的成像参数和经典呼吸结局的关系。
这项横断面研究招募了年龄大于 5 岁且计划进行胸部 CT 的 CF 患者。FRI 结果包括区域性气道容积、气道壁容积、气道阻力、肺叶容积、空气滞留和肺血流分布。除 FRI 外,CT 扫描还由 2 位读者独立使用 CF-CT 评分进行评估。还进行了肺量测定和 6 分钟步行试验(6MWT)。统计检验包括线性混合效应模型、重复测量相关性、Pearson 和 Spearman 相关性。
分析了 24 名(17 名男性/7 名女性)患者的 39 次 CT 扫描。患者年龄为 24 ± 9 岁,首次 CT 时的 ppFEV 为 71 ± 25%。除肺叶容积外,所有 FRI 参数与总 CF-CT 评分均呈显著低至中度相关。当考虑 FRI 参数与类似 CF-CT 亚评分之间的关系时,与气道容积、空气滞留和气道壁增厚相关的参数之间存在显著相关性。空气滞留、正常呼气后肺叶容积和肺血流分布与所有肺功能参数和 6MWT 结束时的血氧饱和度显著相关。此外,空气滞留是唯一与 6MWT 期间覆盖距离相关的参数。亚组分析表明,在比较 FRI 与 CF-CT 评分时,轻度肺部疾病(ppFEV≥70%)患者的相关性明显高于中度至重度肺部疾病(ppFEV<70%)患者。
FRI 确定的多个结构特征与 CF-CT 评分确定的异常相关。空气滞留和肺血流分布似乎是 CF 患者最具临床相关性的 FRI 参数,因为它们与经典的结果测量相关。FRI 方法对于轻度肺部疾病患者可能特别感兴趣,尽管这需要在未来的研究中得到证实。