In order to develop a reproducible, quantifiable means of assessment of the clinical status of patients with idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF), a composite clinical-radiographic-physiologic (CRP) scoring system was devised, using 7 variables: dyspnea, chest radiograph, spirometry, lung volume, diffusion capacity, resting alveolar-arterial PO2, and exercise O2 saturation. To assess this scoring system, we examined the relationships between CRP scores and histopathologic findings, including a cellular pathology score composed of abnormalities deemed to be potentially reversible, a fibrotic pathology score based on abnormalities felt to be essentially irreversible, and an index of overall pathologic derangement (total pathology score), derived from the sum of the cellular and fibrotic scores. The initial CRP determination at the time of open lung biopsy correlated significantly with the total pathology score (r = 0.61, p less than 0.001). The CRP score determined after 6 months of corticosteroid therapy showed a significant correlation with the fibrotic pathology score present on open lung biopsy (r = 0.76, p less than 0.001). The change in CRP after 6 months of corticosteroid therapy tended to reflect the cellular histopathologic component of the open lung biopsy (r = -0.43, p less than 0.10). Moreover, in none of these relationships did any individual component of the CRP score correlate better with the respective histopathologic index than did the CRP score itself. These data suggest that this CRP score is useful for the estimation of the severity of underlying pathologic derangement and for the longitudinal quantitative assessment of clinical impairment in patients with IPF.
Bronchoalveolar lavage has been used to sample cells and proteins in the distal lung. One of the major secretory products of the alveolar type II epithelial cells, pulmonary surfactant, can be recovered by lavage. Abnormalities in alveolar type II cells are found in biopsies of patients with idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF), and abnormalities of pulmonary surfactant phospholipids have been reported after diffuse lung injury in animals and in humans. Therefore, we questioned if abnormalities in lavage phospholipids might also occur in IPF, a chronic inflammatory disease of the alveolar epithelium and interstitium, and, if present, would these abnormalities reflect histopathologic changes or predict responsiveness to therapy. Fifteen untreated patients with IPF, diagnosed by open lung biopsy, were studied and were found to have less than half the amount of bronchoalveolar lavage phospholipid as that recovered from healthy volunteers (p less than 0.05). In addition, patients with IPF had a lower proportion of phosphatidylglycerol and a higher proportion of phosphatidylinositol in the recovered phospholipids than did healthy volunteers (p less than 0.05). The severity of these alterations in phospholipid composition correlated with more advanced fibrotic histopathologic changes. Patients with less depression of total phospholipids in lavage improved with corticosteroid therapy, whereas the patients with more severely decreased total phospholipid recovered in lavage did not.
Controversy exists as to the appropriate methods to use in the processing of bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) fluid for total cell numbers and cellular differential analysis. It has been shown that cell losses (primarily lymphocytes) occur by the most commonly employed methods. Therefore, we examined the total cell and differential counts obtained by several methods of cytocentrifuge preparation and by the filter preparation in 46 consecutive patients with interstitial lung disease and 29 healthy volunteers undergoing bronchoalveolar lavage. The retrieved lavage fluid was pooled, and an aliquot was used to determine the total cell count, cell viability, and the differential cell count by the filter and cytocentrifuge techniques. The remaining fluid was centrifuged (800 g for 10 min), and the cell pellet was resuspended in Hank's balanced salt solution without Ca2+ and Mg2+. An aliquot of these centrifuged and resuspended cells was used for repeat determination of the cell viability, total cell count, and cellular differential by cytocentrifuge technique. Autologous serum was added to another aliquot of these centrifuged and resuspended cells to arrive at a 10% protein solution, and the cellular differential obtained by cytocentrifuged preparation.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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