Findings on High Resolution Computed Tomography in Symptomatic Veterans with Deployment-Related Lung Disease

J Thorac Imaging. 2023 Sep 15:10.1097/RTI.0000000000000742. doi: 10.1097/RTI.0000000000000742. Online ahead of print.

Abstract

Purpose: Military deployment to dusty, austere environments in Southwest Asia and Afghanistan is associated with symptomatic airways diseases including asthma and bronchiolitis. The utility of chest high-resolution computed tomographic (HRCT) imaging in lung disease diagnosis in this population is poorly understood. We investigated visual assessment of HRCT for identifying deployment-related lung disease compared with healthy controls.

Materials and methods: Chest HRCT images from 46 healthy controls and 45 symptomatic deployed military personnel with clinically confirmed asthma and/or biopsy-confirmed distal lung disease were scored by 3 independent thoracic radiologists. We compared demographic and clinical characteristics and frequency of imaging findings between deployers and controls, and between deployers with asthma and those with biopsy-confirmed distal lung disease, using χ2, Fisher exact or t tests, and logistic regression where appropriate. We also analyzed inter-rater agreement for imaging findings.

Results: Expiratory air trapping was the only chest CT imaging finding that was significantly more frequent in deployers compared with controls. None of the 24 deployers with biopsy-confirmed bronchiolitis and/or granulomatous pneumonitis had HRCT findings of inspiratory mosaic attenuation or centrilobular nodularity. Only 2 of 21 with biopsy-proven emphysema had emphysema on HRCT.

Conclusions: Compared with surgical lung biopsy, visual assessment of HRCT showed few abnormalities in this small cohort of previously deployed symptomatic veterans with normal or near-normal spirometry.