4.7 Article

Central paradiaphragmatic middle lobe involvement in nonspecific interstitial pneumonia

Journal

EUROPEAN RADIOLOGY
Volume 31, Issue 9, Pages 7143-7150

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00330-021-07741-z

Keywords

Lung diseases; interstitial; Pulmonary fibrosis; Connective tissue diseases

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In this study, central paradiaphragmatic middle lobe (ML) involvement was found in most NSIP patients, with high interobserver agreement. Fibrosis was present in nearly all cases, while other features such as subpleural sparing, homogeneity, and bronchiectasis varied among patients.
Objectives Nonspecific interstitial pneumonia (NSIP) lacks specific diagnostic guidelines or criteria for imaging diagnosis, and the need for more reliable computed tomography (CT) characterization remains. We hypothesized that central paradiaphragmatic middle lobe (ML) involvement is present in most patients with NSIP. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the prevalence of ML involvement and thus to assess its potential as a unique feature of NSIP. Methods We conducted a retrospective CT-imaging review of 40 patients with biopsy-proven (7/40, 18%) or clinically established (33/40, 82%) NSIP. Three subspecialty-trained thoracic radiologists reviewed CTs for ML involvement both independently and in consensus, and additional CT findings previously described in NSIP independently. Results ML involvement was present in most cases (70%, 28/40, independent review, 78%, 31/40, consensus reading), with substantial agreement among all three readers (kappa = 0.65). Fibrosis was present in almost all cases (93%, 37/40). Subpleural sparing occurred in one-third of patients (30%, 12/40). Homogeneity (48%, 19/40), central bronchiectasis (45%, 18/40), and peripheral bronchiectasis (53%, 21/40) were present in about half of patients. Apart from substantial inter-reader agreement on fibrosis (kappa = 0.65), the above-mentioned imaging characteristics had fair to slight universal agreement (kappa = 0.07-0.30). Conclusions Central paradiaphragmatic ML ground glass attenuation superimposed on reticulation and traction bronchiectasis occurs in most patients with NSIP, with high interobserver agreement.

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