PLoS ONE (Jan 2016)

Women with TSC: Relationship between Clinical, Lung Function and Radiological Features in a Genotyped Population Investigated for Lymphangioleiomyomatosis.

  • Fabiano Di Marco,
  • Silvia Terraneo,
  • Gianluca Imeri,
  • Giuseppina Palumbo,
  • Francesca La Briola,
  • Silvia Tresoldi,
  • Angela Volpi,
  • Lorenzo Gualandri,
  • Filippo Ghelma,
  • Rosa Maria Alfano,
  • Emanuele Montanari,
  • Alfredo Gorio,
  • Elena Lesma,
  • Angela Peron,
  • Maria Paola Canevini,
  • Stefano Centanni

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0155331
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 5
p. e0155331

Abstract

Read online

The advent of pharmacological therapies for lymphangioleiomyomatosis (LAM) has made early diagnosis important in women with tuberous sclerosis complex (TSC), although the lifelong cumulative radiation exposure caused by chest computer tomography (CT) should not be underestimated. We retrospectively investigated, in a cohort of TSC outpatients of San Paolo Hospital (Milan, Italy) 1) the role of pulmonary function tests (PFTs) for LAM diagnosis, 2) the association between LAM and other features of TSC (e.g. demography, extrapulmonary manifestations, genetic mutations, etc.), and 3) the characteristics of patients with multifocal micronodular pneumocyte hyperplasia (MMPH). Eighty-six women underwent chest CT scan; pulmonary involvement was found in 66 patients (77%; 49% LAM with or without MMPH, and 28% MMPH alone). LAM patients were older, with a higher rate of pneumothorax, presented more frequently with renal and hepatic angiomyolipomas, and tended to have a TSC2 mutation profile. PFTs, assessed in 64% of women unaffected by cognitive impairments, revealed a lower lung diffusion capacity in LAM patients. In multivariate analysis, age, but not PFTs, resulted independently associated with LAM diagnosis. Patients with MMPH alone did not show specific clinical, functional or genetic features. A mild respiratory impairment was most common in LAM-TSC patients: In conclusions, PFTs, even if indicated to assess impairment in lung function, are feasible in a limited number of patients, and are not significantly useful for LAM diagnosis in women with TSC.