Abstract

PurposeTo investigate the clinical and computed tomography (CT) characteristics of absorbable pulmonary solid nodules (PSNs) and to clarify CT features for distinguishing absorbable PSNs from malignant ones.Materials and MethodsFrom January 2015 to February 2021, a total of 316 patients with 348 PSNs (171 absorbable and 177 size-matched malignant) were retrospectively enrolled. Their clinical and CT data were analyzed and compared to determine CT features for predicting absorbable PSNs.ResultsBetween absorbable and malignant PSNs, there were significant differences in patients’ age, lesions’ locations, shapes, homogeneity, borders, distance from the pleura, vacuoles, air bronchograms, lobulation, spiculation, halo sign, multiple concomitant nodules and pleural indentation (each P < 0.05). Multivariate analysis revealed that the independent predictors of absorbable PSNs were the following: patient age ≤55 years (OR, 2.660; 95% CI, 1.432–4.942; P = 0.002), homogeneous density (OR, 2.487; 95% CI, 1.107–5.590; P = 0.027), ill-defined border (OR, 5.445; 95% CI, 1.661–17.846; P = 0.005), halo sign (OR, 3.135; 95% CI, 1.154–8.513; P = 0.025), multiple concomitant nodules (OR, 8.700; 95% CI, 4.401–17.197; P<0.001), and abutting pleura (OR, 3.759; 95% CI, 1.407–10.044; P = 0.008). The indicators for malignant PSNs were the following: lobulation (OR, 3.904; 95% CI, 1.956–7.791; P<0.001), spiculation (OR, 4.980; 95% CI, 2.202–11.266, P<0.001), and pleural indentation (OR, 4.514; 95% CI, 1.223–16.666; P = 0.024).ConclusionIn patients younger than 55 years, PSNs with homogeneous density, ill-defined border, halo sign, multiple concomitant nodules, and abutting pleura should be highly suspected as absorbable ones.

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