Kwee Anastasia K A L, Pompe Esther, Gallardo Estrella Leticia, Charbonnier Jean-Paul, Humphries Stephen M, Tiddens Harm A W M, Crapo James D, Casaburi Richard, de Jong Pim A, Lynch David A, Mohamed Hoesein Firdaus A A
Department of Radiology, University Medical Center Utrecht and Utrecht University, 3584 CX Utrecht, The Netherlands.
Thirona B.V., 6525 EC Nijmegen, The Netherlands.
J Pers Med. 2025 Aug 15;15(8):377. doi: 10.3390/jpm15080377.
To personalize the care for persons with smoking-related lung disease, a thorough understanding of its etiology is essential. The role of pulmonary vessels remains poorly understood. Living at high altitude provides a natural model to investigate the effects of low oxygen levels on pulmonary vessels. This study aims to evaluate the relationship between living at high altitudes and small pulmonary vein and artery volumes. We hypothesize that small vein and artery volumes were independently associated with living at high altitude. We quantified small pulmonary vein and artery dimensions (ᴓ < 1 mm) on computed tomography (CT) down to 0.2 mm in diameter and normalized the dimensions by body surface area. In 8931 current and former smokers participating in the COPDGene study, we used multivariate regression models corrected for clinical and technical confounders. 1262 residents (14.1%) were defined as high-altitude residents (~1600 m, Denver, CO, USA). Compared to lower-altitude residents, the high-altitude residents had a higher age (62.0 ± 9.1 vs. 59.6 ± 9.0 years), more pack-years smoked (46.8 vs. 44.1) and a lower FEV% predicted (64.6 ± 32.4% vs. 76.8 ± 25.2%). Both mean small artery volume (4.09 ± 0.89 mL/m vs. 3.85 ± 0.90 mL/m) and mean small vein volume (2.96 ± 0.53 mL/m vs. 2.67 ± 0.53 mL/m) were higher in high-altitude residents. Multivariate linear regression showed that, in those without COPD, high-altitude residents have a higher small vein volume (0.129 mL/m, < 0.001) and higher small artery volume (0.170 mL/m, = 0.001) compared to lower-altitude residents. There was no significant association in residents with COPD. In current and former smokers without COPD, higher small pulmonary vein and artery volumes were associated with living at high altitude, independent of lung disease or technical CT parameters. A potential cause includes vascular remodeling due to an elevated need for blood oxygen transport, which becomes concealed when COPD develops.
为了个性化护理吸烟相关肺病患者,深入了解其病因至关重要。肺血管的作用仍知之甚少。生活在高海拔地区提供了一个研究低氧水平对肺血管影响的自然模型。本研究旨在评估生活在高海拔地区与小肺静脉和动脉体积之间的关系。我们假设小静脉和动脉体积与生活在高海拔地区独立相关。我们在计算机断层扫描(CT)上对直径小于1毫米(低至0.2毫米)的小肺静脉和动脉尺寸进行量化,并按体表面积对尺寸进行标准化。在参与慢性阻塞性肺疾病基因(COPDGene)研究的8931名当前和既往吸烟者中,我们使用了针对临床和技术混杂因素进行校正的多变量回归模型。1262名居民(14.1%)被定义为高海拔居民(约1600米,美国科罗拉多州丹佛市)。与低海拔居民相比,高海拔居民年龄更大(62.0±9.1岁对59.6±9.0岁),吸烟包年数更多(46.8对44.1),预计第一秒用力呼气容积(FEV%)更低(64.6±32.4%对76.8±25.2%)。高海拔居民的平均小动脉体积(4.09±0.89毫升/米对3.85±0.90毫升/米)和平均小静脉体积(2.96±0.53毫升/米对2.67±0.53毫升/米)均更高。多变量线性回归显示,在无慢性阻塞性肺疾病的人群中,与低海拔居民相比,高海拔居民的小静脉体积更高(0.129毫升/米,<0.001),小动脉体积更高(0.170毫升/米,=0.001)。在慢性阻塞性肺疾病患者中无显著关联。在无慢性阻塞性肺疾病的当前和既往吸烟者中,较高的小肺静脉和动脉体积与生活在高海拔地区相关,与肺部疾病或CT技术参数无关。一个潜在原因包括由于对血氧运输需求增加导致的血管重塑,而当慢性阻塞性肺疾病发生时这种影响就会被掩盖。