The utility of transbronchial lung biopsies to guide the treatment decision in patients with rheumatic inflammatory diseases: a retrospective cross-sectional study

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The utility of transbronchial lung biopsies to guide the treatment decision in patients with rheumatic inflammatory diseases : a retrospective cross-sectional study. / Andersen, Martin; Lund, Thomas K.; Jensen, Thomas H. L.; Iversen, Martin; Perch, Michael; Baslund, Bo.

In: Rheumatology International, Vol. 42, 2022, p. 1955–1963.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Andersen, M, Lund, TK, Jensen, THL, Iversen, M, Perch, M & Baslund, B 2022, 'The utility of transbronchial lung biopsies to guide the treatment decision in patients with rheumatic inflammatory diseases: a retrospective cross-sectional study', Rheumatology International, vol. 42, pp. 1955–1963. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00296-022-05131-2

APA

Andersen, M., Lund, T. K., Jensen, T. H. L., Iversen, M., Perch, M., & Baslund, B. (2022). The utility of transbronchial lung biopsies to guide the treatment decision in patients with rheumatic inflammatory diseases: a retrospective cross-sectional study. Rheumatology International, 42, 1955–1963. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00296-022-05131-2

Vancouver

Andersen M, Lund TK, Jensen THL, Iversen M, Perch M, Baslund B. The utility of transbronchial lung biopsies to guide the treatment decision in patients with rheumatic inflammatory diseases: a retrospective cross-sectional study. Rheumatology International. 2022;42:1955–1963. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00296-022-05131-2

Author

Andersen, Martin ; Lund, Thomas K. ; Jensen, Thomas H. L. ; Iversen, Martin ; Perch, Michael ; Baslund, Bo. / The utility of transbronchial lung biopsies to guide the treatment decision in patients with rheumatic inflammatory diseases : a retrospective cross-sectional study. In: Rheumatology International. 2022 ; Vol. 42. pp. 1955–1963.

Bibtex

@article{d4e5a3a15cbc4f33a7fbdf184d820502,
title = "The utility of transbronchial lung biopsies to guide the treatment decision in patients with rheumatic inflammatory diseases: a retrospective cross-sectional study",
abstract = "The role of transbronchial lung biopsies (TBB) in the diagnostic workup of systemic inflammatory rheumatic disease-associated interstitial lung disease (SIRD-ILD) is unclear and TBB is not generally recommended. The study objective was to examine the utility of TBB to guide treatment in a population of patients with SIRD-ILD. All patients from the Department of Rheumatology, Rigshospitalet, Denmark, who had TBB performed, from 2002 to 2016 were identified. Patient demographics as well as smoking status, previous lung disease, pulmonary function test, SIRD-diagnosis, imaging results and immunomodulatory therapy pre- and post-bronchoscopy were obtained. Histology findings were used to dichotomize patients into a high-inflammatory group or a low-inflammatory group. The high-inflammation group primarily consisted of non-specific interstitial pneumonia, organizing pneumonia, lymphocytic infiltrating pneumonia and granulomatous inflammation whereas the low inflammation group primarily consisted of histological findings of usual interstitial pneumonitis and biopsies describing fibrosis and/or sparse unspecific inflammation. Therapeutic consequence was defined as intensification of therapy. Differences in treatment intensification were calculated using a binominal logistic regression model. Ninety-six patients had TBB performed. Biopsies from 55 patients were categorized as high inflammatory and 41 as low inflammatory, respectively. In the high-inflammatory group, 38 (69%) had their therapy intensified compared to 6 (14%) in the low-inflammatory group (Odds ratio 8.0, 95% confidence limits 3.2-20.0, P < 0.001). No procedure-related complications were registered. TBB findings can guide treatment strategy in SIRD-ILD patients with suspected activity in the pulmonary disease. TBB appears safe and could be considered as part of the diagnostic workup.",
keywords = "Connective tissue disease, Interstitial lung disease, Biopsies, Therapy, Interventional, Pulmonology, RESOLUTION CT FINDINGS, BRONCHOALVEOLAR LAVAGE, INTERSTITIAL PNEUMONIA, DIAGNOSIS, COMPLICATIONS, CRYOBIOPSY",
author = "Martin Andersen and Lund, {Thomas K.} and Jensen, {Thomas H. L.} and Martin Iversen and Michael Perch and Bo Baslund",
year = "2022",
doi = "10.1007/s00296-022-05131-2",
language = "English",
volume = "42",
pages = "1955–1963",
journal = "Rheumatology International",
issn = "0172-8172",
publisher = "Springer",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - The utility of transbronchial lung biopsies to guide the treatment decision in patients with rheumatic inflammatory diseases

T2 - a retrospective cross-sectional study

AU - Andersen, Martin

AU - Lund, Thomas K.

AU - Jensen, Thomas H. L.

AU - Iversen, Martin

AU - Perch, Michael

AU - Baslund, Bo

PY - 2022

Y1 - 2022

N2 - The role of transbronchial lung biopsies (TBB) in the diagnostic workup of systemic inflammatory rheumatic disease-associated interstitial lung disease (SIRD-ILD) is unclear and TBB is not generally recommended. The study objective was to examine the utility of TBB to guide treatment in a population of patients with SIRD-ILD. All patients from the Department of Rheumatology, Rigshospitalet, Denmark, who had TBB performed, from 2002 to 2016 were identified. Patient demographics as well as smoking status, previous lung disease, pulmonary function test, SIRD-diagnosis, imaging results and immunomodulatory therapy pre- and post-bronchoscopy were obtained. Histology findings were used to dichotomize patients into a high-inflammatory group or a low-inflammatory group. The high-inflammation group primarily consisted of non-specific interstitial pneumonia, organizing pneumonia, lymphocytic infiltrating pneumonia and granulomatous inflammation whereas the low inflammation group primarily consisted of histological findings of usual interstitial pneumonitis and biopsies describing fibrosis and/or sparse unspecific inflammation. Therapeutic consequence was defined as intensification of therapy. Differences in treatment intensification were calculated using a binominal logistic regression model. Ninety-six patients had TBB performed. Biopsies from 55 patients were categorized as high inflammatory and 41 as low inflammatory, respectively. In the high-inflammatory group, 38 (69%) had their therapy intensified compared to 6 (14%) in the low-inflammatory group (Odds ratio 8.0, 95% confidence limits 3.2-20.0, P < 0.001). No procedure-related complications were registered. TBB findings can guide treatment strategy in SIRD-ILD patients with suspected activity in the pulmonary disease. TBB appears safe and could be considered as part of the diagnostic workup.

AB - The role of transbronchial lung biopsies (TBB) in the diagnostic workup of systemic inflammatory rheumatic disease-associated interstitial lung disease (SIRD-ILD) is unclear and TBB is not generally recommended. The study objective was to examine the utility of TBB to guide treatment in a population of patients with SIRD-ILD. All patients from the Department of Rheumatology, Rigshospitalet, Denmark, who had TBB performed, from 2002 to 2016 were identified. Patient demographics as well as smoking status, previous lung disease, pulmonary function test, SIRD-diagnosis, imaging results and immunomodulatory therapy pre- and post-bronchoscopy were obtained. Histology findings were used to dichotomize patients into a high-inflammatory group or a low-inflammatory group. The high-inflammation group primarily consisted of non-specific interstitial pneumonia, organizing pneumonia, lymphocytic infiltrating pneumonia and granulomatous inflammation whereas the low inflammation group primarily consisted of histological findings of usual interstitial pneumonitis and biopsies describing fibrosis and/or sparse unspecific inflammation. Therapeutic consequence was defined as intensification of therapy. Differences in treatment intensification were calculated using a binominal logistic regression model. Ninety-six patients had TBB performed. Biopsies from 55 patients were categorized as high inflammatory and 41 as low inflammatory, respectively. In the high-inflammatory group, 38 (69%) had their therapy intensified compared to 6 (14%) in the low-inflammatory group (Odds ratio 8.0, 95% confidence limits 3.2-20.0, P < 0.001). No procedure-related complications were registered. TBB findings can guide treatment strategy in SIRD-ILD patients with suspected activity in the pulmonary disease. TBB appears safe and could be considered as part of the diagnostic workup.

KW - Connective tissue disease

KW - Interstitial lung disease

KW - Biopsies

KW - Therapy

KW - Interventional

KW - Pulmonology

KW - RESOLUTION CT FINDINGS

KW - BRONCHOALVEOLAR LAVAGE

KW - INTERSTITIAL PNEUMONIA

KW - DIAGNOSIS

KW - COMPLICATIONS

KW - CRYOBIOPSY

U2 - 10.1007/s00296-022-05131-2

DO - 10.1007/s00296-022-05131-2

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 35416492

VL - 42

SP - 1955

EP - 1963

JO - Rheumatology International

JF - Rheumatology International

SN - 0172-8172

ER -

ID: 308076873