BAL is a valuable method in diagnostic pathway of pulmonary sarcoidosis. However, results of BALF examination must be interpreted considering a specific clinical case. BALF CD4/CD8 ratio depends on clinical and radiographic manifestation.
Background: The aim of the present study was to identify specious radiologic and/or physiologic prognostic marker(s), which lead to optimize of the patient follow-up frequency. Methods: Eighty consecutive patients with newly diagnosed pulmonary sarcoidosis. Patients underwent chest radiography, high-resolution computed tomography (HRCT) examination, pulmonary function tests (PFT), bronchoscopy with bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) and lung biopsy, and bronchoalveolar lavage fluid (BALF) cell examination. Results: The reduction in PFT values seen in radiological sarcoidosis stage III was greater than that seen in stages I and II. The percentage of neutrophils in the lungs was found to increase in stages II and III. PFT indices were correlated negatively with the consolidation and ground glass opacities CT scores, but not with the micronodule or macronodule scores. The rise in the percentage of BALF lymphocytes was associated with the restriction pattern of PFT. The diagnostic value of BALF for sarcoidosis was higher when the typical radiologic patterns of stage I disease were found and that smoking decreased the diagnostic value of CD4/CD8 ratio. Conclusions: This study supports the opinion that the staging of the pulmonary sarcoidosis with chest X-rays is still valuable from the prognostic point of view, because significant correlations between the radiologic stages of sarcoidosis and PFT parameters were found. Chest HRCT was significantly superior to chest X-ray in detecting mediastinal and pulmonary parenchymal changes. However, the prognostic role of HRCT needs to be better investigated evaluating serial examinations. Only consolidation and ground glass scores (neither of which are frequently found in sarcoidosis) hold prognostic value, since these were negatively correlated with PFT parameters.
BackgroundSarcoidosis is associated with an increase in the number of alveolar T cells (CD3+ cells) and an increase of the CD3+CD4+ lymphocyte subset. However, the number of lymphocytes and the CD4/CD8 ratio in bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) fluid are highly variable in sarcoidosis. Comparative studies have demonstrated that geographic and ethnic factors are linked to the specific characteristics of patients with sarcoidosis.Aim of the studyTo investigate peculiarities of BAL fluid (BALF) cell patterns in different clinical activity of pulmonary sarcoidosis at the time of diagnosis.Material and methodsA total of 308 non-treated patients (138 asymptomatic and 170 with sarcoidosis-related symptoms) and 40 previously empirically steroid-treated patients with newly diagnosed sarcoidosis have been prospectively examined.ResultsSignificant BAL fluid lymphocytosis and increased CD4/CD8 ratio were characteristic for all three sarcoidosis patient groups. A total of 12% of asymptomatic patients, 3% of patients with sarcoidosis-related symptoms, and 5% of previously treated symptomatic patients had normal BALF cell counts. Non-treated patients with sarcoidosis-related symptoms had significantly higher lymphocytosis (45±19% versus 39±17%, P<0.01), CD4/CD8 ratio (9.3±5.0 versus 5.7±4.5, P<0.001), and total BALF cell count (411±322 106/mL versus 334±273 106/mL, P<0.05), compared with asymptomatic patients. However, previously treated symptomatic patients had lower lymphocytosis (39±15% versus 45±19%, P=0.058), and total BALF cell count (292±166 106/mL versus 411±322 106/mL, P<0.05) compared with non-treated symptomatic patients. The same trend was noticed for CD4/CD8 ratio (8.3±4.8), although a statistically significant difference was not achieved.ConclusionsIndependently of clinical symptoms at the time of diagnosis sarcoid patients have significantly different BAL fluid cell patterns compared to healthy persons. BAL fluid cell changes are more prominent in corticosteroid non-treated patients with clinically active sarcoidosis. Treatment with systemic corticosteroids may modify typical BALF cellular patterns of sarcoidosis.
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