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One-Year Change in Quantitative Computed Tomography Is Associated with Meaningful Outcomes in Fibrotic Lung Disease.

Authors

Koslow M,Baraghoshi D,Swigris JJ,Brown KK,Fernández Pérez ER,Huie TJ,Keith RC,Mohning MP,Solomon JJ,Yunt ZX,Manco G,Lynch DA,Humphries SM

Affiliations (5)

  • National Jewish Health Department of Medicine, Center for Interstitial Lung Disease, Denver, Colorado, United States; [email protected].
  • National Jewish Health, Division of Biostatistics, Denver, Colorado, United States.
  • National Jewish Health Department of Medicine, Center for Interstitial Lung Disease, Denver, Colorado, United States.
  • G. D'Annunzio University of Chieti-Pescara, Radiology, Chieti, Italy.
  • National Jewish Health, Radiology, Denver, Colorado, United States.

Abstract

Whether change in fibrosis on high-resolution CT (HRCT) is associated with near- and longer-term outcomes in patients with fibrotic interstitial lung disease (fILD) remains unclear. We evaluated the association between 1-year change in quantitative fibrosis scores (DTA) and subsequent forced vital capacity (FVC) and survival in patients with fILD. The primary cohort included fILD patients evaluated from 2017-2020 with baseline and 1-year follow-up HRCT and FVC. Associations between DTA change and subsequent FVC were assessed using linear mixed models. Transplant-free survival was assessed using Cox proportional hazards models. The Pulmonary Fibrosis Foundation (PFF-PR) Patient Registry served as the validation cohort. The primary cohort included 407 patients (median [IQR] age, 70.5 [64.8, 75.9] years; 214 male). One-year increase in DTA was associated with subsequent FVC decline and transplant-free survival. The largest effect on FVC was observed in patients with low baseline DTA scores in whom a 5% increase in DTA over 1 year was associated with a change in FVC of -91 mL/year [95% CI: -117, -65] (vs stable DTA: -49 mL/year [95% CI: -69, -29]; p=0.0002). The hazard ratio for transplant-free survival for a 5% increase in DTA over one year was 1.45 [95% CI: 1.25, 1.68]. Findings were confirmed in the validation cohort. One-year change in DTA score is associated with future disease trajectory and transplant-free survival in patients with fILD. DTA could be a useful trial endpoint, cohort enrichment tool, and metric to incorporate into clinical care.

Topics

Journal Article

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