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EClinicalMedicine . Pneumonia is the Most Common Finding in Surgical Lung Biopsies from Patients with Persistent Interstitial Lung Disease Following Infection with SARS-CoV-2

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  • EClinicalMedicine . Pneumonia is the Most Common Finding in Surgical Lung Biopsies from Patients with Persistent Interstitial Lung Disease Following Infection with SARS-CoV-2


    EClinicalMedicine


    . 2021 Nov 23;101209.
    doi: 10.1016/j.eclinm.2021.101209. Online ahead of print.
    Usual Interstitial Pneumonia is the Most Common Finding in Surgical Lung Biopsies from Patients with Persistent Interstitial Lung Disease Following Infection with SARS-CoV-2


    Kristine E Konopka 1 , William Perry 1 , Tao Huang 1 , Carol F Farver 1 , Jeffrey L Myers 1



    Affiliations

    Abstract

    Background: There is increasing interest in persistent interstitial lung disease (ILD) following resolution of acute COVID-19. No studies have yet reported findings in surgical lung biopsies (SLB) from this patient population.
    Methods: Our Michigan Medicine pathology database was queried for SLB reviewed between January 2020 and April 2021 from patients with persistent ILD following recovery from acute COVID-19. Slides for our retrospective observational study were independently reviewed by two thoracic pathologists, who were blinded to patient clinical data, radiographic findings, and previous pathologic diagnosis.
    Findings: Eighteen cases met inclusion criteria. Of these, nine had usual interstitial pneumonia (UIP). These included two patients with superimposed acute lung injury (ALI). Five cases showed a spectrum of ALI that ranged from persistent diffuse alveolar damage to organizing pneumonia. Four patients had desquamative interstitial pneumonia (1), acute and organizing bronchopneumonia (1), or no diagnostic abnormality (2). Compared to patients without UIP, those with UIP tended to be older and have pre-existing lung disease prior to COVID-19. In patients with UIP, pre-SLB chest computed tomography changes included groundglass with interstitial thickening or peripheral reticulations with bronchiectasis; no UIP patients had groundglass only. The most common radiographic finding in patients without UIP was groundglass opacities only.
    Interpretation: UIP was the most common pathologic finding in patients undergoing evaluation for post-COVID-19 ILD. Our preliminary data suggests that CT changes described as interstitial thickening, peripheral reticulations, and/or bronchiectasis may be helpful in identifying patients with underlying fibrotic chronic interstitial pneumonia for which UIP is the chief concern.
    Funding: No intramural or extramural funding sources supported this work.

    Keywords: coronavirus; interstitial lung disease; lung pathology.

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