2009
DOI: 10.3109/15412550903341513
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Clinical Significance of Radiologic Characterizations in COPD

Abstract: COPD is a heterogeneous disorder with clinical assessment becoming increasingly multidimensional. We hypothesized HRCT phenotype would strongly influence clinical outcomes including health status, exacerbation frequency, and BODE. COPD subjects were characterized via the SF-12, SGRQ, MMRC, physiologic testing, and standardized volumetric chest HRCT. Visual semi-quantitative estimation of bronchial wall thickness (VBT) and automated quantification of emphysema percent and bronchial wall thickness were generated… Show more

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Cited by 85 publications
(83 citation statements)
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References 32 publications
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“…Our study results corroborate our published preliminary fi ndings and the fi ndings of others ( 8,21 ). Airway infl ammation, as measured by using wall thickness at the segmental level, offers additional potentially important prognostic information beyond that assessed with spirometry alone.…”
Section: Thoracic Imaging: Phenotypes Associated With Chronic Obstrucsupporting
confidence: 83%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Our study results corroborate our published preliminary fi ndings and the fi ndings of others ( 8,21 ). Airway infl ammation, as measured by using wall thickness at the segmental level, offers additional potentially important prognostic information beyond that assessed with spirometry alone.…”
Section: Thoracic Imaging: Phenotypes Associated With Chronic Obstrucsupporting
confidence: 83%
“…We previously reported, for a small cohort of 34 patients, that a visual semiquantitative measurement of bronchial thickness was associated with increased COPD exacerbation frequency, after adjustment for FEV 1 percent predicted ( 8 ). However, it is unclear how these measures perform in a larger more diverse population of patients with COPD.…”
Section: Data Collection and Exacerbation Determinationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…24 It is also becoming clear that CT scans can provide quantitative measures of both emphysema and airways disease and that each correlates with specific phenotypic characteristics. 25 Recent guidelines, including those published by the National Institute for Clinical Excellence in the UK, and the American, Canadian and European Thoracic Societies, have increasingly recognised the need to incorporate non-spirometric measures in assessing COPD and determining appropriate therapy. 22,26,27 These guidelines support the prescription of additional therapies for patients with ongoing respiratory symptoms and poor quality of life independent of lung function impairment.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…An emerging area of COPD phenotype research is the use of radiologic imaging to categorize patients into different phenotypes based on the degree of emphysema and bronchial wall thickening, a prominent imaging feature of bronchiectasis. 1,11,[25][26][27] The "emphysema hyperinflation phenotype" was relatively well established in previous studies, defining patients with COPD who present with dyspnea and intolerance to exercise as the predominating symptoms, accompanied by signs of hyperinflation. 28 However, the role of bronchiectasis in COPD remains unclear.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%