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Utility of a lung biopsy for the diagnosis of idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis

Authors :
James C. Hogg
Talmadge E. King
J. Allen D. Cooper
Barry H. Gross
Richard G. Hegele
Galen B. Toews
Robert P. Baughman
Nestor L. Müller
Gary W. Hunninghake
Joseph P. Lynch
R. A. Helmers
Charlie Strange
David A. Lynch
Jeff Galvin
David A. Schwartz
James A. Waldron
Mark Millard
M. Bridget Zimmerman
Thomas V. Colby
Source :
Scopus-Elsevier
Publication Year :
2001

Abstract

It is not known if a surgical lung biopsy is necessary in all patients for the diagnosis of idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF). We conducted a blinded, prospective study at eight referring centers. Initially, cases were evaluated by clinical history and examination, transbronchial biopsy, and high-resolution lung computed tomography scans. Pulmonologists at the referring centers then assessed their certainty of the diagnosis of IPF and provided an overall diagnosis, before surgical lung biopsy. The lung biopsies were reviewed by a pathology core and 54 of 91 patients received a pathologic diagnosis of IPF. The positive predictive value of a confident (certain) clinical diagnosis of IPF by the referring centers was 80%. The positive predictive value of a confident clinical diagnosis was higher, when the cases were reviewed by a core of pulmonologists (87%) or radiologists (96%). Lung biopsy was most important for diagnosis in those patients with an uncertain diagnosis and those thought unlikely to have IPF. These studies suggest that clinical and radiologic data that result in a confident diagnosis of IPF by an experienced pulmonologist or radiologist are sufficient to obviate the need for a lung biopsy. Lung biopsy is most helpful when clinical and radiologic data result in an uncertain diagnosis or when patients are thought not to have IPF.

Details

ISSN :
1073449X
Volume :
164
Issue :
2
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
American journal of respiratory and critical care medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....4caf1fe866e69fcaaf88bcd2f7d014c8