Tatiana Soldati, Margherita Vaselli, Kirsten Mooij - Kalverda, Erik Thunnissen, Michael Tanck, Onno Mets, Inge Van Den Berk, Jouke Annema, Peter Bonta, Johannes De Boer
{"title":"In-vivo endobronchial-PS-OCT for fibrosis quantification in ILD","authors":"Tatiana Soldati, Margherita Vaselli, Kirsten Mooij - Kalverda, Erik Thunnissen, Michael Tanck, Onno Mets, Inge Van Den Berk, Jouke Annema, Peter Bonta, Johannes De Boer","doi":"10.1183/13993003.congress-2023.oa4850","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<b>Introduction:</b> In interstitial lung diseases (ILD), early detection of the presence and progression of fibrosis is key. Endobronchial polarization sensitive optical coherence tomography (EB-PS-OCT) is a high resolution (10 μm), minimally invasive technique that detects collagen birefringence and has therefore the potential to detect and quantify pulmonary fibrosis. <b>Aim:</b> Investigate the ability of in-vivo EB-PS-OCT to quantify fibrosis in ILD. <b>Methods:</b> ILD patients underwent in-vivo EB-PS-OCT imaging of lung parenchyma prior to transbronchial cryo- or surgical lung biopsy. Asthma patients served as non-fibrotic control. Fibrosis was automatically quantified by assessing the mean birefringence area in EB-PS-OCT images of the alveolar compartment and compared to fibrotic content in HRCT and histology. <b>Results:</b> 19 patients were included (16 ILD; 3 asthma). In 49 out of 55 imaged segments EB-PS-OCT parenchymal birefringence was quantified, ranging from a mean fibrosis score of 2.54% (no to minimal fibrosis) to 21.01% (extensive fibrosis). EB-PS-OCT showed higher accuracy than HRCT in detecting fibrosis, using histology as reference standard. No adverse events occurred. <b>Conclusion:</b> In vivo EB-PS-OCT is a feasible, safe and minimally invasive imaging technique to detect and quantify pulmonary fibrosis. It could be used as an add-on bronchoscopic imaging technique to diagnosis and assess (progressive) fibrosis in ILD patients.","PeriodicalId":34850,"journal":{"name":"Imaging","volume":"31 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.7000,"publicationDate":"2023-09-09","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Imaging","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1183/13993003.congress-2023.oa4850","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q3","JCRName":"MEDICINE, GENERAL & INTERNAL","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Introduction: In interstitial lung diseases (ILD), early detection of the presence and progression of fibrosis is key. Endobronchial polarization sensitive optical coherence tomography (EB-PS-OCT) is a high resolution (10 μm), minimally invasive technique that detects collagen birefringence and has therefore the potential to detect and quantify pulmonary fibrosis. Aim: Investigate the ability of in-vivo EB-PS-OCT to quantify fibrosis in ILD. Methods: ILD patients underwent in-vivo EB-PS-OCT imaging of lung parenchyma prior to transbronchial cryo- or surgical lung biopsy. Asthma patients served as non-fibrotic control. Fibrosis was automatically quantified by assessing the mean birefringence area in EB-PS-OCT images of the alveolar compartment and compared to fibrotic content in HRCT and histology. Results: 19 patients were included (16 ILD; 3 asthma). In 49 out of 55 imaged segments EB-PS-OCT parenchymal birefringence was quantified, ranging from a mean fibrosis score of 2.54% (no to minimal fibrosis) to 21.01% (extensive fibrosis). EB-PS-OCT showed higher accuracy than HRCT in detecting fibrosis, using histology as reference standard. No adverse events occurred. Conclusion: In vivo EB-PS-OCT is a feasible, safe and minimally invasive imaging technique to detect and quantify pulmonary fibrosis. It could be used as an add-on bronchoscopic imaging technique to diagnosis and assess (progressive) fibrosis in ILD patients.