Diagnostics (Jan 2024)

A Retrospective Analysis of 2-Year Follow-Up of Patients with Incidental Findings of Sarcoidosis

  • Oluwabukola Thomas-Orogan,
  • Shaney L. Barratt,
  • Muhammad Zafran,
  • Apollo Kwok,
  • Anneliese Simons,
  • Eoin P. Judge,
  • Matthew Wells,
  • Richard Daly,
  • Charles Sharp,
  • Abiramy Jeyabalan,
  • Martin Plummeridge,
  • Ladli Chandratreya,
  • Lisa G. Spencer,
  • Andrew R. L. Medford,
  • Huzaifa I. Adamali

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/diagnostics14030237
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 3
p. 237

Abstract

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Introduction: Sarcoidosis is a multi-system granulomatous disease most commonly involving the lungs. It may be incidentally diagnosed during imaging studies for other conditions or non-specific symptoms. The appropriate follow-up of incidentally diagnosed asymptomatic stage 1 disease has not been well defined. Objective: To define the clinical course of incidentally diagnosed asymptomatic stage 1 sarcoidosis and propose an algorithm for the follow-up of these patients. Methodology: A retrospective case note analysis was performed of all EBUS-TBNA (endobronchial ultrasound-guided transbronchial needle aspiration)-confirmed cases of stage 1 sarcoidosis presenting incidentally to Bristol and Liverpool Interstitial Lung Disease services. Clinical history, serology results, imaging scans, and lung function parameters were examined at baseline, 12, and 24 months. A cost analysis was performed comparing the cost of the current 2-year follow-up guidance to a 1 year follow-up period. Results: Sixty-seven patients were identified as the final cohort. There was no significant change in the pulmonary function tests over the two-year follow-up period. Radiological disease stability was observed in the majority of patients (58%, n = 29), and disease regression was evidenced in 40% (n = 20) at 1 year. Where imaging was performed at 2 years, the majority (69.8%, n = 37) had radiological evidence of disease regression, and 30.2% (n = 16) showed radiological evidence of stability. All patients remained asymptomatic and did not require therapeutic intervention over the study period. Conclusions: Our results show that asymptomatic patients with incidental findings of thoracic lymph nodal non-caseating granulomas do not progress over a 2-year period. Our results suggest that the prolonged secondary-care follow-up of such patients may not be necessary. We propose that these patients are followed up for 1 year with a further year of patient-initiated follow-up (PIFU) prior to discharge.

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