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Old dilemma: asthma with irreversible airway obstruction or COPD.

Authors :
Fattahi F
Vonk JM
Bulkmans N
Fleischeuer R
Gouw A
Grünberg K
Mauad T
Popper H
Felipe-Silva A
Vrugt B
Wright JL
Yang HM
Kocks JW
Hylkema MN
Postma DS
Timens W
Ten Hacken NH
Source :
Virchows Archiv : an international journal of pathology [Virchows Arch] 2015 Nov; Vol. 467 (5), pp. 583-93. Date of Electronic Publication: 2015 Sep 14.
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

Older asthmatic patients may develop fixed airway obstruction and clinical signs of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). We investigated the added value of pathological evaluation of bronchial biopsies to help differentiate asthma from COPD, taking into account smoking, age, and inhaled corticosteroid (ICS) use. Asthma and COPD patients (24 of each category) were matched for ICS use, age, FEV(1), and smoking habits. Five pulmonary and five general pathologists examined bronchial biopsies using an interactive website, without knowing patient information. They were asked to diagnose asthma or COPD on biopsy findings in both a pairwise and randomly mixed order of cases during four different phases, with intervals of 4-6 weeks, covering a maximal period of 36 weeks. Clinically concordant diagnoses of asthma or COPD varied between 63 %-73 %, without important differences between pairwise vs randomly mixed examination or between general vs pulmonary pathologists. The highest percentage of concordant diagnoses was in young asthmatic patients without ICS use and in COPD patients with ICS use. In non ICS users with fixed airway obstruction, a COPD diagnosis was favored if abnormal presence of glands, squamous metaplasia, and submucosal infiltrate was present and an asthma diagnosis in case of abnormal presence of goblet cells. In ICS users with fixed airway obstruction, abnormal presence of submucosal infiltrates, basement membrane thickening, eosinophils, and glands was associated with asthma. Histological characteristics in bronchial biopsies are reproducibly recognized by pathologists, yet the differentiation by histopathology between asthma and COPD is difficult without information about ICS use.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1432-2307
Volume :
467
Issue :
5
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Virchows Archiv : an international journal of pathology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
26369547
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00428-015-1824-6