Assessment of early lung disease in young children with CF: A comparison between pressure-controlled and free-breathing chest computed tomography

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Abstract

Background: Chest computed tomography (CT) in children with cystic fibrosis (CF) is sensitive in detecting early airways disease. The pressure-controlled CT-protocol combines a total lung capacity scan (TLC PC-CT) with a near functional residual capacity scan (FRC PC-CT) under general anesthesia, while another CT-protocol is acquired during free breathing (FB-CT) near functional residual capacity. The aim of this study was to evaluate the sensitivity in detecting airways disease of both protocols in two cohorts. Methods: Routine PC-CTs (Princess Margaret Children's Hospital) and FB-CTs (Erasmus MC—Sophia Children's Hospital) were retrospectively collected from CF children aged 2 to 6 years. Total airways disease (%disease), bronchiectasis (%Bx), and low attenuation regions (%LAR) were scored on CTs using the Perth-Rotterdam annotated grid morphometric analysis-CF method. The Wilcoxon signed-rank test was used for differences between TLC and FRC PC-CTs and the Wilcoxon rank-sum test for differences between FRC PC-CTs and FB-CTs. Results: Fifty patients with PC-CTs (21 male, aged 2.5-5.5 years) and 42 patients with FB-CTs (26 male, aged 2.3-6.8 years) were included. %Disease was higher on TLC PC-CTs compared with FRC PC-CTs (median 4.51 vs 2.49; P

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Oudraad, M. C. J., Kuo, W., Rosenow, T., Andrinopoulou, E. R., Stick, S. M., & Tiddens, H. A. W. M. (2020). Assessment of early lung disease in young children with CF: A comparison between pressure-controlled and free-breathing chest computed tomography. Pediatric Pulmonology, 55(5), 1161–1168. https://doi.org/10.1002/ppul.24702

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