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Analysis of 39 cases of idiopathic chronic interstitial pneumonia

Análise de 39 casos de pneumonia intersticial crônica idiopática

Rogério Rufino, Leonardo Rizzo, Cláudia Henrique da Costa, Roberto José de Lima, Kalil Madi

ABSTRACT

Objective: To make a retrospective analysis of lung biopsy samples obtained from patients diagnosed with chronic idiopathic interstitial pneumonia, as defined in the American Thoracic Society/European Respiratory Society classification system made public in 2000. Methods: Samples from 252 open-lung biopsies of patients with interstitial lung disease, all performed between 1977 and 1999, were reviewed, and 39 cases of idiopathic interstitial lung disease were selected and re-evaluated by two pathologists in accordance with the American Thoracic Society/European Respiratory Society classification system. Results: Among those 39 cases, the diagnoses were maintained in 28 (71.8%). A new pathologic entity, nonspecific interstitial pneumonia, was included in the reclassification, and overlapping patterns were observed in 6 cases. Of the 28 cases in which the diagnosis of chronic idiopathic interstitial pneumonia remained unchanged, idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis was accompanied by cryptogenic organizing pneumonia in 4, cryptogenic organizing pneumonia was accompanied by nonspecific interstitial pneumonia in 1, and desquamative interstitial pneumonia was accompanied by nonspecific interstitial pneumonia in 1. All cases of idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis were confirmed, although 3 of those were found to be accompanied by cryptogenic organizing pneumonia. Virtually all prior diagnoses were maintained in the review of the biopsy samples (p > 0,05). Conclusion: The American Thoracic Society/European Respiratory Society system of classifying interstitial lung disease is a useful tool for pathologists who deal with lung biopsies.

Keywords: Pulmonary fibrosis; Lung diseases, interstitial

RESUMO

Objetivo: Analisar de forma retrospectiva fragmentos de biópsias pulmonares que receberam o diagnóstico de pneumonia intersticial crônica idiopática, à luz da classificação da American Thoracic Society e European Respiratory Society, de 2000. Métodos: A partir da revisão de 252 fragmentos de biópsias pulmonares a céu aberto de pacientes com doença intersticial pulmonar, no período de 1977 a 1999, 39 casos de doença pulmonar intersticial idiopática foram selecionados e reavaliados por dois patologistas, segundo a classificação da American Thoracic Society e European Respiratory Society, de 2000. Resultados: Vinte e oito dos 39 diagnósticos foram mantidos (71,8%). Uma nova entidade patológica, a pneumonia intersticial não específica, foi incluída na reclassificação e houve superposição de padrões em seis casos. Mantiveram o mesmo diagnóstico 28 casos, 4 casos apresentaram associação entre fibrose pulmonar idiopática e organização pneumônica criptogênica, 1 entre organização pneumônica criptogênica e pneumonia intersticial não específica, e 1 entre pneumonia intersticial descamativa e pneumonia intersticial não específica. Todos os casos de fibrose pulmonar idiopática foram confirmados, embora 3 deles estivessem associados a organização pneumônica criptogênica. Os diagnósticos anteriores foram quase todos mantidos na revisão dos espécimes (p > 0,05). Conclusão: A classificação das doenças pulmonares intersticiais da American Thoracic Society e European Respiratory Society é uma ferramenta útil aos patologistas que lidam com biópsias pulmonares.

Palavras-chave: Fibrose pulmonar; Doenças pulmonares intersticiais

INTRODUCTION

Most idiopathic diffuse interstitial lung diseases are chronic inflammatory processes that can result in fibrosis and deformation of the parenchyma, representing an heterogeneous group of entities classified by clinical, functional, radiological and histopathologic criteria.(1-2) In many cases, the histopathologic diagnosis contributes decisively to defining the disease, especially when there is a positive correlation with the radiological aspects and clinical evolution. In a smaller number of cases, difficulties arise due to the superimposition of morphological patterns and the low representativeness of the specimen when compared to the lung as a whole. Another problem found in the final decades of the twentieth century is related to the conceptual aspect, a number of diagnostic labels having been created, thereby making it more difficult to come to a clear understanding of the various morbidities linked to this special lung ailment.(3-4) The American Thoracic Society/European Respiratory Society (ATS/ERS) classification, published in 2000,(1) is a multidisciplinary consensus and defines seven types of idiopathic interstitial pneumonias. This consensus describes morphological patterns that are not specific to one disease, such as 'usual' interstitial pneumonia, which is seen in idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF), asbestosis, drug-induced lung disease and collagen-related diseases.

Based on this new classification system, which is internationally accepted, we reviewed all the cases of idiopathic interstitial lung disease treated at two different institutions in the last 30 years. Our objective was to determine whether these old cases met the ATS/ERS criteria.

METHODS

A retrospective microscopy study was carried out involving open lung biopsy fragments obtained between 1977 and 1999 from 252 patients with interstitial disease treated in the Pathology Departments of the Clementino Fraga Filho University Hospital and the Beneficência Portuguesa Hospital of Rio de Janeiro. Previous diagnoses had been made using clinical and radiological criteria (X-rays and high-resolution computed tomography scans), respiratory function tests and histopathology. The patients were divided into two groups: those in which the cause was known (213 cases); and those in which it was not (idiopathic; 39 cases). The 39 samples of unknown etiology were analyzed by two pathologists, who were specialists in pulmonary diseases.

A new analysis, using the ATS/ERS criteria,(2) was made. The analyzing pathologists were blinded as to the previous diagnosis. The diagnosis was obtained according to a consensus between the pathologists, using conventional techniques, such as hematoxylin and eosin staining, Masson's trichrome stain, and reticulin.

Parametric t-test and two-tailed Pearson's correlation coefficient were used to analyze the results. Values of p < 0.05 were considered statistically significant.

RESULTS

For demographic data analysis, the cases were separated based on the previous diagnosis. The demographic data of the analyzed patients are shown in Table 1. Patient age was found to be similar in both groups (p > 0.05). However, in the idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis group there was greater impairment in the males (p < 0.05). After the new histopathologic evaluation, the 15 previous diagnoses of idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis were confirmed. However, 3 of those were accompanied by the cryptogenic organizing pneumonia (COP) pattern (Table 2). The diagnosis of 12 COP cases was maintained, although 1 of them was associated with the nonspecific interstitial pneumonia (NSIP) pattern, and other was accompanied by the idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis pattern (Figure 1). In the 2 cases of interstitial lung disease with respiratory bronchiolitis, as well as in the 3 cases of acute interstitial pneumonia, the previous diagnosis was preserved. Of the 2 cases of lymphocytic interstitial pneumonia, 1 was confirmed and the other was modified to hypersensitivity pneumonia. The only case of desquamative interstitial pneumonia was considered to be concomitant with NSIP. The 4 cases of interstitial pneumonia that were not classified previously received new diagnoses: COP (2 cases), NSIP (1 case), and hypersensitivity pneumonia (1 case). All of the 39 cases were classified, and there was no difference (p = 0.24) between the histopathologic diagnosis before and after the ATS/ERS consensus. There was, however, significant concordance between the diagnoses made in the two periods (p = 0.0014; r2 = 0.9824).















DISCUSSION

This study reviewed cases collected from 1977 onward, when Liebow's pioneering classification was still being used.(5) Despite this fact, the review of all 39 cases confirmed the diagnosis initially provided for 28 patients (71.8%). In the 11 remaining cases, the diagnosis was modified in only 1 (from lymphocytic interstitial pneumonia to hypersensitivity pneumonia, due to the presence of loose granulomas and the fact that the lymphocytic infiltrate was not prominent).(6) Of the 4 cases that had not been diagnosed at the time and had been considered nonspecific interstitial pneumonia, 1 was reclassified as NSIP, 2 as COP and 1 as hypersensitivity pneumonia. In this study, there were no cases of fibrotic NSIP.(7-8) Superimposition of pathological patterns was seen in 6 cases (15.38%), and COP was the pattern associated with higher frequency.(9-11)

The adoption of the standards proposed by ATS/ERS did not result in a statistically significant difference between the diagnoses made before 2000 and those made after 2000. This can be explained by the fact that virtually all of the morphological patterns had been described more than one decade before.(12)

A study carried out in 2004(13) analyzed the pathological concordance between pathologists in the diagnosis of cases of interstitial lung diseases of known and unknown etiologies treated between 1996 and 1997, using the ATS/ERS current criteria. The authors demonstrated that there was greater concordance between the diagnoses in cases of 'usual' interstitial pneumonia diagnosis (k = 0.42), COP (k = 0.57) and sarcoidosis (k = 0.76), and that there was lower concordance between the diagnoses in cases of NSIP (k = 0.23).

The identification of different morphological patterns in the same specimen can pose difficulties for pathologists, preventing them from reaching a definitive conclusion, and might have an impact on the clinical evolution, the therapeutic approach and the prognosis.(14-15) The combination of patterns in the same sample leads us to believe that one pathological pattern can be transformed into another, or, at least in some cases, that the spectrum of injury might be more complex than suggested by the simplicity of the existing classification systems.(16-22) This was suggested in a study conducted in 2002, which verified molecular similarity between 'usual' interstitial pneumonia and NSIP in familial interstitial diseases.(23) The results of other studies have also indicated evolutive and morphological similarities between fibrotic NSIP and 'usual' interstitial pneumonia, thus confirming the hypothesis of an injury continuum.(7-8, 24-26)

One study(27) demonstrated that the lesion of epithelial cell DNA occurred was similar in NSIP and 'usual' interstitial pneumonia, although with more intensity in the latter, suggesting an initial process of pulmonary epithelial lesion.

The establishment of the ATS/ERS classification system was an attempt to organize idiopathic chronic interstitial pneumonias by using
histopathologic patterns applicable to clinical and radiological profiles.
This classification system re-introduced COP as an interstitial entity and consolidated NSIP but maintained previously used standards, standardizing the language and the descriptions of patterns for pathologists.

The morphological patterns, together with clinical and radiological information, can confer relative specificity on the diagnosis of idiopathic interstitial lung diseases. According to the ATS/ERS classification, the diagnosis was confirmed in 28 (71.8%) of the 39 cases analyzed, and superimposition of patterns was seen in 6 cases. These combinations indicate a lack of specificity in the pulmonary response to aggression and suggest that the pathogenesis is based on a continuous injury spectrum.
The ATS/ERS classification system is a useful instrument for pathologists that analyze lung biopsies. However, in our study, the use of this system did not substantially modify the previously established pathological diagnoses.

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____________________________________________________________________________________________
*Study carried out at the Universidade do Estado do Rio de Janeiro (UERJ, Rio de Janeiro State University), Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.
1. Postdoctoral degree from the National Heart and Lung Institute - Imperial College/London. Adjunct Professor of Pulmonology and Phthisiology at the Universidade do Estado do Rio de Janeiro (UERJ, Rio de Janeiro State University) School of Medical Sciences, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
2. Resident in Pathology at the Instituto Nacional do Câncer (INCA, Cancer National Institute), Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.
3. Doctorate in Pulmonology from the Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro (UFRJ, Federal University of Rio de Janeiro), Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Assistant professor of Pulmonology and Phthisiology at the Universidade do Estado do Rio de Janeiro (UERJ, Rio de Janeiro State University) School of Medical Sciences, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
4. Assistant Professor in the Department of Pathology of the Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro (UFRJ, Federal University of Rio de Janeiro) School of Medicine, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.
5. Full Professor in the Department of Pathology of the Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro (UFRJ, Federal University of Rio de Janeiro) School of Medicine, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.
Correspondence to: Rogério Rufino. Rua Mário Pederneiras, 10/121, Humaitá - CEP: 22041-020, Rio de Janeiro, RJ, Brasil.
Tel: 55 21 2527-6871. Email:rrufino@uerj.br
Submitted: 3 March 2006. Approved, after review: 5 April 2006.

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