4.7 Article

Ultrasound lung comets in systemic sclerosis: a chest sonography hallmark of pulmonary interstitial fibrosis

Journal

RHEUMATOLOGY
Volume 48, Issue 11, Pages 1382-1387

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/rheumatology/kep263

Keywords

Chest sonography; High-resolution computed tomography; Ultrasound lung comets; Systemic sclerosis

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Objective. To assess the correlation between ultrasound lung comets (ULCs, a recently described echographic sign of interstitial lung fibrosis) and the current undisputed gold-standard high-resolution CT (HRCT) to detect pulmonary fibrosis in patients with SSc. Methods. We enrolled 33 consecutive SSc patients (mean age 54 +/- 13 years, 30 females) in the Rheumatology Clinic of the University of Pisa. We assessed ULCs and chest HRCT within 1 week independently in all the patients. ULC score was obtained by summing the number of lung comets on the anterior and posterior chest. Pulmonary fibrosis was quantified by HRCT with a previously described 30-point Warrick score. Results. Presence of ULCs (defined as a total number more than 10) was observed in 17 (51%) SSc patients. Mean ULC score was 37 50, higher in the diffuse than in the limited form (73 +/- 66 vs 21 +/- 35; P<0.05). A significant positive linear correlation was found between ULCs and Warrick scores (r=0.72; P<0.001). Conclusions. ULCs are often found in SSc, are more frequent in the diffuse than the limited form and are reasonably well correlated with HRCT-derived assessment of lung fibrosis. They represent a simple, bedside, radiation-free hallmark of pulmonary fibrosis of potential diagnostic and prognostic value.

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