Abstract

ObjectiveBronchiectasis is an important component of cystic fibrosis (CF) lung disease but little is known about its development. We aimed to study the development of bronchiectasis and identify determinants for rapid progression of bronchiectasis on chest CT.MethodsForty-three patients with CF with at least four consecutive biennial volumetric CTs were included. Areas with bronchiectasis on the most recent CT were marked as regions of interest (ROIs). These ROIs were generated on all preceding CTs using deformable image registration. Observers indicated whether: bronchiectasis, mucus plugging, airway wall thickening, atelectasis/consolidation or normal airways were present in the ROIs.ResultsWe identified 362 ROIs on the most recent CT. In 187 (51.7 %) ROIs bronchiectasis was present on all preceding CTs, while 175 ROIs showed development of bronchiectasis. In 139/175 (79.4 %) no pre-stages of bronchiectasis were identified. In 36/175 (20.6 %) bronchiectatic airways the following pre-stages were identified: mucus plugging (17.7 %), airway wall thickening (1.7 %) or atelectasis/consolidation (1.1 %). Pancreatic insufficiency was more prevalent in the rapid progressors compared to the slow progressors (p = 0.05).ConclusionMost bronchiectatic airways developed within 2 years without visible pre-stages, underlining the treacherous nature of CF lung disease. Mucus plugging was the most frequent pre-stage.Key Points • Development of bronchiectasis in cystic fibrosis lung disease on CT. • Most bronchiectatic airways developed within 2 years without pre-stages. • The most frequently identified pre-stage was mucus plugging. • This study underlines the treacherous nature of CF lung disease. Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1007/s00330-016-4329-z) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • An important component of cystic fibrosis (CF) lung disease is bronchiectasis [1]

  • In 5/367 (1.4 %) regions of interest (ROIs), bronchiectasis turned into a different category before being scored as Previous literature showed that bronchiectasis is irreversible and we excluded those 5/367 cases from further analysis

  • Our observations provide a unique insight into the radiological course of developing bronchiectasis

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Bronchiectasis has been observed on chest CT in infants with CF as young as 10 weeks of age [6,7,8,9,10,11]. To prevent the development of bronchiectasis it is of great clinical importance to identify early prestages on CT with the aim of preventing further progression. Airway wall thickening and atelectasis or consolidation have been observed to develop early in life in many patients and these changes could potentially be prestages for the development of bronchiectasis [1]. Studies showed that once bronchiectatic airways are present, they progress in severity [1, 6, 10, 13, 14]. It remains unclear how bronchiectatic airways evolve and why progression is more rapid in some patients [15]

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call