Abstract
Primary ciliary dyskinesia (PCD) and cystic fibrosis (CF) are respiratory conditions requiring regular chest radiography (CXR) surveillance to monitor pulmonary disease. However, CXR is insensitive for lung disease in CF and PCD. Lung ultrasound (LU) is a radiation-free alternative showing good correlation with severity of lung disease in CF but has not been studied in PCD. Standardized, six-zone LU studies and CXR were performed on a convenience sample of children with PCD or CF during a single visit when well. LU studies were graded using the LU scoring system, while CXR studies received a modified Chrispin-Norman score. Scores were correlated with clinical outcomes. Data from 30 patients with PCD and 30 with CF (median age PCD 11.5 years, CF 9.1 years) with overall mild pulmonary disease (PCD median FEV1 90% predicted, CF FEV1 100%) were analyzed. LU abnormalities appear in 11/30 (36%) patients with PCD and 9/30 (30%) with CF. Sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive, and negative predictive values for abnormal LU compared to the gold standard of CXR are 42%, 61%, 42%, and 61% in PCD, and 44%, 81%, 50%, and 77% in CF, respectively. Correlation between LU and CXR scores are poor for both diseases (PCD r = -0.1288, p = 0.4977; CF r = 0.0343, p = 0.8571), and LU score does not correlate with clinical outcomes in PCD. The correlation of LU findings with CXR surveillance studies is poor in patients with mild disease burdens from PCD or CF, and LU scores do not correlate with clinical outcomes in PCD.
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