Original Article


Segmental bronchi collapsibility: computed tomography-based quantification in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and correlation with emphysema phenotype, corresponding lung volume changes and clinical parameters

Christopher Kloth, Wolfgang Maximilian Thaiss, Hendrik Ditt, Jürgen Hetzel, Eva Schülen, Konstantin Nikolaou, Marius Horger

Abstract

Background: Global pulmonary function tests lack region specific differentiation that might influence therapy in severe chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) patients. Therefore, the aim of this work was to assess the degree of expiratory 3rd generation bronchial lumen collapsibility in patients with severe COPD using chest-computed tomography (CT), to evaluate emphysema-phenotype, lobar volumes and correlate results with pulmonary function tests.
Methods: Thin-slice chest-CTs acquired at end-inspiration & end-expiration in 42 COPD GOLD IV patients (19 females, median-age: 65.9 y) from November 2011 to July 2014 were re-evaluated. The cross-sectional area of all segmental bronchi was measured 5 mm below the bronchial origin in both examinations. Lung lobes were semi-automatically segmented, volumes calculated at end-inspiratory and end-expiratory phase and visually defined emphysema-phenotypes defined. Results of CT densitometry were compared with lung functional tests including forced expiratory volume at 1 s (FEV1), total lung capacity (TLC), vital capacity (VC), residual volume (RV), diffusion capacity parameters and the maximal expiratory flow rates (MEFs).
Results: Mean expiratory bronchial collapse was 31%, stronger in lobes with homogenous (38.5%) vs. heterogeneous emphysema-phenotype (27.8%, P=0.014). The mean lobar expiratory volume reduction was comparable in both emphysema-phenotypes (volume reduction 18.6%±8.3% in homogenous vs. 17.6%±16.5% in heterogeneous phenotype). The degree of bronchial lumen collapsibility, did not correlate with expiratory volume reduction. MEF25 correlated weakly with 3rd generation airway collapsibility (r=0.339, P=0.03). All patients showed a concentric expiratory reduction of bronchial cross-sectional area.
Conclusions: Changes in collapsibility of 3rd generation bronchi in COPD grade IV patients is significantly lower than that in the trachea and the main bronchi. Collapsibility did not correlate with the reduction in lung volume but was significantly higher in lobes with homogeneous vs. heterogeneous emphysema phenotype. Changes in the 3rd generation bronchial calibres between inspiration and expiration are not predictive for the degree of small airway collapsibility and related airflow limitation.

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