Scientific Reports (Aug 2024)

Causal inference analysis of the radiologic progression in the chronic obstructive pulmonary disease

  • Yunjoo Im,
  • Kwonsang Lee,
  • Sang Min Lee,
  • Sun Hye Shin,
  • Yeonseok Choi,
  • Jae-Seung Lee,
  • Yeon Mok Oh,
  • Jonghoon Kim,
  • You Jin Oh,
  • Ho Yun Lee,
  • Hye Yun Park

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-024-68560-y
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 1
pp. 1 – 8

Abstract

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Abstract There is limited evidence regarding the causal inference of emphysema and functional small airway disease in the subsequent progression of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). Patients consisting of two independent cohorts diagnosed with COPD and underwent two serial chest CT scans were included. Total percent emphysema (PRMEmph) and fSAD (PRMfSAD) was quantified via PRM. To investigate the progression of emphysema, we divided COPD patients with PRMEmph < 10% into low and high PRMfSADgroup, matched with similar baseline characteristics, and conducted nonparametric hypothesis tests based on randomization inference using Wilcoxon signed rank test and Huber’s M statistics. In patients with baseline PRMEmph < 10%, there were 26 and 16 patients in the low PRMfSA group and 52 and 64 patients in the high PRMfSA in the derivation and validation cohorts, respectively. In the both low and high PRMfSAD groups, there were 0.11 and 1.43 percentage point increases (Huber’s M statistic p = 0.016) and 0.58 and 2.09 percentage point increases (p = 0.038) in the proportion of emphysema in the derivation and validation cohorts, respectively. On the contrary, among patients with baseline PRMfSAD < 20%, there was no significant differences in the interval changes of PRMfSAD between the low and high PRMEmph groups in both cohorts. In COPD patients with low emphysema, group with baseline high PRMfSAD showed greater change of PRMEmph than those with low PRMfSAD in both the derivation and validation cohorts. Imaging-based longitudinal quantitative analysis may provide important evidence that small airway disease precedes emphysema in CT-based early COPD patients.

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