High attenuation areas on chest computed tomography in community-dwelling adults: the MESA study

Anna J. Podolanczuk(Columbia University Irving Medical Center), Elizabeth C. Oelsner(Columbia University Irving Medical Center), R. Graham Barr(Columbia University Irving Medical Center), Eric A. Hoffman(University of Iowa), Hilary F. Armstrong(Columbia University Irving Medical Center), John H. M. Austin(Columbia University Irving Medical Center), Robert C. Basner(Columbia University Irving Medical Center), Matthew N. Bartels(Albert Einstein College of Medicine), Jason D. Christie(University of Pennsylvania), Paul Enright(University of Arizona), Bernadette R. Gochuico(National Human Genome Research Institute), Karen Hinckley Stukovsky(University of Washington), Joel D. Kaufman(University of Washington), P. H. Nath(University of Alabama), John D. Newell(University of Iowa), Scott M. Palmer(Duke University), Dan Rabinowitz(Columbia University), Ganesh Raghu(University of Washington), Jessica Sell(Columbia University Irving Medical Center), Jered Sieren(Vida Diagnostics (United States)), Sushil Sonavane(University of Alabama), Russell P. Tracy(University of Vermont), Jubal R. Watts(University of Alabama), Kayleen Williams(University of Washington), Steven M. Kawut(University of Pennsylvania), David J. Lederer(Columbia University Irving Medical Center)
European Respiratory Journal
July 28, 2016
Cited by 166Open Access
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Abstract

Evidence suggests that lung injury, inflammation and extracellular matrix remodelling precede lung fibrosis in interstitial lung disease (ILD). We examined whether a quantitative measure of increased lung attenuation on computed tomography (CT) detects lung injury, inflammation and extracellular matrix remodelling in community-dwelling adults sampled without regard to respiratory symptoms or smoking.We measured high attenuation areas (HAA; percentage of lung voxels between -600 and -250 Hounsfield Units) on cardiac CT scans of adults enrolled in the Multi-Ethnic Study of Atherosclerosis.HAA was associated with higher serum matrix metalloproteinase-7 (mean adjusted difference 6.3% per HAA doubling, 95% CI 1.3-11.5), higher interleukin-6 (mean adjusted difference 8.8%, 95% CI 4.8-13.0), lower forced vital capacity (FVC) (mean adjusted difference -82 mL, 95% CI -119--44), lower 6-min walk distance (mean adjusted difference -40 m, 95% CI -1--80), higher odds of interstitial lung abnormalities at 9.5 years (adjusted OR 1.95, 95% CI 1.43-2.65), and higher all cause-mortality rate over 12.2 years (HR 1.58, 95% CI 1.39-1.79).High attenuation areas are associated with biomarkers of inflammation and extracellular matrix remodelling, reduced lung function, interstitial lung abnormalities, and a higher risk of death among community-dwelling adults.


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