Frontiers in Medicine (Jul 2023)

Clinical, radiological, and pathological features of minute pulmonary meningothelial-like nodules and diffuse pulmonary meningotheliomatosis

  • Naijian Li,
  • Sicui Quan,
  • Qin Liu,
  • Zhiling Xie,
  • Qiong Wang,
  • Nian Wang,
  • Jinlin Wang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fmed.2023.1209491
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10

Abstract

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BackgroundMinute pulmonary meningothelial-like nodules (MPMNs) and diffuse pulmonary meningotheliomatosis (DPM) are both rare lung diseases that involve the proliferation of cells of meningothelial origin in the lungs. However, few studies have focused on the clinical, pathological, and radiological features of MPMNs and DPMs.MethodsThe clinicopathological data of 167 cases diagnosed as MPMNs and 13 cases diagnosed as DPM in the China National Center for Respiratory Medicine were examined. Based on clinical data, CT images, and morphological features, this study analyzed the similarities and differences between MPMNs and DPM.ResultsThe detection rates of MPMNs and DPM were 1.9 and 0.15%, respectively. Compared to MPMNs, DPM patients were all women (100% vs. 79.4%, P = 0.066), had a younger age (51.4 ± 7.7 vs. 57.9 ± 8.5, P < 0.01), and had higher pulmonary function (P < 0.01 or P < 0.05). The chest CT of DPM patients showed diffuse ground-glass opacity nodules measuring 2.0–8.0 mm in diameter, with the number of nodules ranging from 40 to >600 per lung. There were no significant differences in nodule volume [28.0 (12.1, 65.1) mm3 vs. 28.7 (17.1, 48.9) mm3, P = 0.451] and CT values [−646.8 (−732.5, −514.5) Hu vs. −588 (−674, −480) Hu, P = 0.215] between MPMNs and DPM. MPMNs are characterized by reactive hyperplasia pulmonary nodules, which can be solitary or multiple.ConclusionThis study suggests that there are many different characteristics between patients with MPMNs and DPM. The limited findings challenge the notion that DPM is a rare subtype of MPMNS.

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