Respiratory Research (May 2020)

Quantitative CT-based structural alterations of segmental airways in cement dust-exposed subjects

  • Taewoo Kim,
  • Hyun Bin Cho,
  • Woo Jin Kim,
  • Chang Hyun Lee,
  • Kum Ju Chae,
  • So-Hyun Choi,
  • Kyeong Eun Lee,
  • So Hyeon Bak,
  • Sung Ok Kwon,
  • Gong Yong Jin,
  • Jiwoong Choi,
  • Eun-Kee Park,
  • Ching-Long Lin,
  • Eric A. Hoffman,
  • Sanghun Choi

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12931-020-01399-9
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 21, no. 1
pp. 1 – 11

Abstract

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Abstract Background Dust exposure has been reported as a risk factor of pulmonary disease, leading to alterations of segmental airways and parenchymal lungs. This study aims to investigate alterations of quantitative computed tomography (QCT)-based airway structural and functional metrics due to cement-dust exposure. Methods To reduce confounding factors, subjects with normal spirometry without fibrosis, asthma and pneumonia histories were only selected, and a propensity score matching was applied to match age, sex, height, smoking status, and pack-years. Thus, from a larger data set (N = 609), only 41 cement dust-exposed subjects were compared with 164 non-cement dust-exposed subjects. QCT imaging metrics of airway hydraulic diameter (D h), wall thickness (WT), and bifurcation angle (θ) were extracted at total lung capacity (TLC) and functional residual capacity (FRC), along with their deformation ratios between TLC and FRC. Results In TLC scan, dust-exposed subjects showed a decrease of D h (airway narrowing) especially at lower-lobes (p < 0.05), an increase of WT (wall thickening) at all segmental airways (p < 0.05), and an alteration of θ at most of the central airways (p < 0.001) compared with non-dust-exposed subjects. Furthermore, dust-exposed subjects had smaller deformation ratios of WT at the segmental airways (p < 0.05) and θ at the right main bronchi and left main bronchi (p < 0.01), indicating airway stiffness. Conclusions Dust-exposed subjects with normal spirometry demonstrated airway narrowing at lower-lobes, wall thickening at all segmental airways, a different bifurcation angle at central airways, and a loss of airway wall elasticity at lower-lobes. The airway structural alterations may indicate different airway pathophysiology due to cement dusts.

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