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Increased monocyte level is a risk factor for radiological progression in patients with early fibrotic interstitial lung abnormality

Increased monocyte level is a risk factor for radiological progression in patients with early fibrotic interstitial lung abnormality
Increased monocyte level is a risk factor for radiological progression in patients with early fibrotic interstitial lung abnormality
Background: interstitial lung abnormalities (ILA) are specific spatial patterns on computed tomography (CT) scan potentially compatible with early interstitial lung disease. A proportion will progress; management involves risk stratification and surveillance. Elevated blood monocyte levels have been shown to associate with progression of idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis. The aims of the present study were: 1) to estimate the proportion of “early fibrotic” (EF)-ILAs (reticular±ground-glass opacities, excluding traction bronchiectasis and honeycombing) on CT scans of patients attending all-indications thoracic CTs, and proportion demonstrating radiological progression; and 2) to explore association between peripheral blood leukocyte levels and ILA progression.

Methods: we analysed all thoracic CT reports in individuals aged 45–75 years performed between January 2015 and December 2020 in one large teaching hospital (Oxford, UK) to identify patient CT reports consistent with EF-ILA. CT-contemporaneous blood leukocyte counts were examined to explore contribution to progression and all-cause mortality, using multivariate Cox regression.

Results: 40 711 patients underwent thoracic CT imaging during this period. 1259 (3.1%) demonstrated the EF-ILA pattern (mean±sd age 65.4±7.32 years; 735 (47.8%) male). EF-ILA was significantly associated with all-cause mortality (hazard ratio 1.87, 95% CI 1.25–2.78; p=0.002). 362 cases underwent at least one follow-on CT. Radiological progression was observed in 157 (43.4%) cases: increase in reticulation n=51, new traction bronchiectasis n=84, honeycombing n=22. Monocyte count, neutrophil count, monocyte:lymphocyte ratio, neutrophil:lymphocyte ratio and “systemic inflammatory response index” were significantly associated with radiological progression.

Conclusion: 3.1% of subjects requiring thoracic CT during a 6-year period demonstrated EF-ILA. Monocyte levels and blood leukocyte-derived indexes were associated with radiological progression and could indicate which patients may require closer follow-up.
2312-0541
Achaiah, Andrew
46767290-7d70-4812-a2cd-8c111ac03405
Lyon, Paul
3bc9e9dd-f88f-468e-8b1c-cab50328ab26
Fraser, Emily
068cd61f-a468-4c11-9cb8-28377f3c2149
Saunders, Peter
26226a21-7d75-45ba-8bce-a2a27c50062f
Hoyles, Rachel
b1605fc3-de70-46bb-916c-05329f58a232
Benamore, Rachel
89eb7cc1-99bf-4a3c-9ed1-a55580915fea
Ho, Ling-pei
78fd2483-d7c2-4244-8ffe-e3c8a2d27e32
Achaiah, Andrew
46767290-7d70-4812-a2cd-8c111ac03405
Lyon, Paul
3bc9e9dd-f88f-468e-8b1c-cab50328ab26
Fraser, Emily
068cd61f-a468-4c11-9cb8-28377f3c2149
Saunders, Peter
26226a21-7d75-45ba-8bce-a2a27c50062f
Hoyles, Rachel
b1605fc3-de70-46bb-916c-05329f58a232
Benamore, Rachel
89eb7cc1-99bf-4a3c-9ed1-a55580915fea
Ho, Ling-pei
78fd2483-d7c2-4244-8ffe-e3c8a2d27e32

Achaiah, Andrew, Lyon, Paul, Fraser, Emily, Saunders, Peter, Hoyles, Rachel, Benamore, Rachel and Ho, Ling-pei (2022) Increased monocyte level is a risk factor for radiological progression in patients with early fibrotic interstitial lung abnormality. ERJ Open Research, 8 (3), [00226-2022]. (doi:10.1183/23120541.00226-2022).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: interstitial lung abnormalities (ILA) are specific spatial patterns on computed tomography (CT) scan potentially compatible with early interstitial lung disease. A proportion will progress; management involves risk stratification and surveillance. Elevated blood monocyte levels have been shown to associate with progression of idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis. The aims of the present study were: 1) to estimate the proportion of “early fibrotic” (EF)-ILAs (reticular±ground-glass opacities, excluding traction bronchiectasis and honeycombing) on CT scans of patients attending all-indications thoracic CTs, and proportion demonstrating radiological progression; and 2) to explore association between peripheral blood leukocyte levels and ILA progression.

Methods: we analysed all thoracic CT reports in individuals aged 45–75 years performed between January 2015 and December 2020 in one large teaching hospital (Oxford, UK) to identify patient CT reports consistent with EF-ILA. CT-contemporaneous blood leukocyte counts were examined to explore contribution to progression and all-cause mortality, using multivariate Cox regression.

Results: 40 711 patients underwent thoracic CT imaging during this period. 1259 (3.1%) demonstrated the EF-ILA pattern (mean±sd age 65.4±7.32 years; 735 (47.8%) male). EF-ILA was significantly associated with all-cause mortality (hazard ratio 1.87, 95% CI 1.25–2.78; p=0.002). 362 cases underwent at least one follow-on CT. Radiological progression was observed in 157 (43.4%) cases: increase in reticulation n=51, new traction bronchiectasis n=84, honeycombing n=22. Monocyte count, neutrophil count, monocyte:lymphocyte ratio, neutrophil:lymphocyte ratio and “systemic inflammatory response index” were significantly associated with radiological progression.

Conclusion: 3.1% of subjects requiring thoracic CT during a 6-year period demonstrated EF-ILA. Monocyte levels and blood leukocyte-derived indexes were associated with radiological progression and could indicate which patients may require closer follow-up.

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00226-2022.full - Version of Record
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Accepted/In Press date: 12 May 2022
e-pub ahead of print date: 4 July 2022
Additional Information: Funding information: Medical Research Council

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 487594
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/487594
ISSN: 2312-0541
PURE UUID: 08e00338-307f-4542-a368-aefc7708d4ba

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Date deposited: 28 Feb 2024 17:50
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 07:46

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Contributors

Author: Andrew Achaiah
Author: Paul Lyon
Author: Emily Fraser
Author: Peter Saunders
Author: Rachel Hoyles
Author: Rachel Benamore
Author: Ling-pei Ho

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