[HTML][HTML] Variation of densitometry on computed tomography in COPD–influence of different software tools

MO Wielpütz, D Bardarova, O Weinheimer… - PloS one, 2014 - journals.plos.org
MO Wielpütz, D Bardarova, O Weinheimer, HU Kauczor, M Eichinger, BJ Jobst, R Eberhardt…
PloS one, 2014journals.plos.org
Objectives Quantitative multidetector computed tomography (MDCT) as a potential
biomarker is increasingly used for severity assessment of emphysema in chronic obstructive
pulmonary disease (COPD). Aim of this study was to evaluate the user-independent
measurement variability between five different fully-automatic densitometry software tools.
Material and Methods MDCT and full-body plethysmography incl. forced expiratory volume
in 1s and total lung capacity were available for 49 patients with advanced COPD (age= 64±9 …
Objectives
Quantitative multidetector computed tomography (MDCT) as a potential biomarker is increasingly used for severity assessment of emphysema in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). Aim of this study was to evaluate the user-independent measurement variability between five different fully-automatic densitometry software tools.
Material and Methods
MDCT and full-body plethysmography incl. forced expiratory volume in 1s and total lung capacity were available for 49 patients with advanced COPD (age = 64±9 years, forced expiratory volume in 1s = 31±6% predicted). Measurement variation regarding lung volume, emphysema volume, emphysema index, and mean lung density was evaluated for two scientific and three commercially available lung densitometry software tools designed to analyze MDCT from different scanner types.
Results
One scientific tool and one commercial tool failed to process most or all datasets, respectively, and were excluded. One scientific and another commercial tool analyzed 49, the remaining commercial tool 30 datasets. Lung volume, emphysema volume, emphysema index and mean lung density were significantly different amongst these three tools (p<0.001). Limits of agreement for lung volume were [−0.195, −0.052l], [−0.305, −0.131l], and [−0.123, −0.052l] with correlation coefficients of r = 1.00 each. Limits of agreement for emphysema index were [−6.2, 2.9%], [−27.0, 16.9%], and [−25.5, 18.8%], with r = 0.79 to 0.98. Correlation of lung volume with total lung capacity was good to excellent (r = 0.77 to 0.91, p<0.001), but segmented lung volume (6.7±1.3 – 6.8±1.3l) were significantly lower than total lung capacity (7.7±1.7l, p<0.001).
Conclusions
Technical incompatibilities hindered evaluation of two of five tools. The remaining three showed significant measurement variation for emphysema, hampering quantitative MDCT as a biomarker in COPD. Follow-up studies should currently use identical software, and standardization efforts should encompass software as well.
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