Cancers (Mar 2024)

Correlation of Bronchoscopy and CT in Characterizing Malignant Central Airway Obstruction

  • Sukumar Kalvapudi,
  • Hafiz M. Zubair,
  • Rajesh Kunadharaju,
  • Sajeer Bhura,
  • Hiwot Mengiste,
  • Musa Saeed,
  • Arjun Saradna,
  • Harshwant Grover,
  • Gal Shafirstein,
  • Sai Yendamuri,
  • Nathaniel M. Ivanick

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers16071258
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 7
p. 1258

Abstract

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Background: Malignant Central Airway Obstruction (MCAO) presents a significant challenge in lung cancer management, with notable morbidity and mortality implications. While bronchoscopy is the established diagnostic standard for confirming MCAO and assessing obstruction subtype (intrinsic, extrinsic, mixed) and severity, Computed Tomography (CT) serves as an initial screening tool. However, the extent of agreement between CT and bronchoscopy findings for MCAO remains unclear. Methods: To assess the correlation between bronchoscopy and CT, we conducted a retrospective review of 108 patients at Roswell Park Comprehensive Cancer Center, analyzing CT and bronchoscopy results to document MCAO presence, severity, and subtype. Results: CT correctly identified MCAO in 99% of cases (107/108). Agreement regarding obstruction subtype (80.8%, Cohen’s κ = 0.683, p p < 0.001) was moderate. CT tended to equally overestimate (7/19) and underestimate (7/19) the degree of obstruction. CT was also poor in identifying mucosal involvement in mixed MCAO. Conclusions: CT demonstrates reasonable agreement with bronchoscopy in detecting obstruction. Nevertheless, when CT indicates a positive finding for MCAO, it is advisable to conduct bronchoscopy. This is because CT lacks reliability in determining the severity of obstruction and identifying the mucosal component of mixed disease.

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