Pathology of Interstitial Lung Disease Flashcards
In interstitial lung diseases, what typically happens to the lung compliance, FVC, and FEV1:FVC ratio?
Restrictive pattern:
Reduced lung compliance
Reduced FVC
Normal FEV1:FVC ratio
What can be seen generally in pathology in all interstitial lung diseases?
- Chronic inflammatory infiltrate
- Cyst formation from coalescence of alveoli
- Interstitial fibrosis
- Honeycomb lung
What is honeycomb lung?
End stage scarred lung
- > dilated airspaces from destroyed lung alternating with fibrous scars
- > septae are extremely thick with poor gas exchange due to fibrosis of interstitium
What are the two names for the most common ILD and what is the prognosis?
Usual Interstitial Pneumonitis (UIP) or Idiopathic Pulmonary Fibrosis (IPF)
Prognosis: Poor - 3 year median survival
What are the common risk factors for UIP?
Smoking, wood dust inhalation, and therapy with EGFR TKI’s (mutations for fibrosis develop)
What is the common pathology of UIP?
Subpleural and bibasilar accentuation of tissue damage (extensive fibrosis)
->heterogeneity of tissue damage with “fibroblastic foci” - extensive fibroblast proliferation with ECM
What must not be present to make a UIP diagnosis?
Pertinent negative findings:
i.e. granulomas, Langerhans cells, asbestos bodies
-> thinks which would rule out idiopathic fibrosis
What is the inciting stimulus which begins fibrosis in UIP?
Damage to respiratory epithelium / basement membrane
- > activation of inflammation and coagulation pathways
- > eventual release of growth factors and TGF-beta, with tissue remodelling
What processes are responsible for an increase in fibroblasts in UIP?
- Transformation of pneumocytes into myofibroblasts (Epithelial-Mesenchymal-Transition)
- Migration from bone marrow
- Proliferation of native fibroblasts
What is DIP and how does it epidemiologically and prognostically differ from UIP?
DIP - Desquamating Interstitial Pneumonitis
Epidemiologically - happens in 40s and 50s vs 60s and 70s with UIP.
DIP is very associated with smoking and is made better by cessations - 90-100% survival
What is seen in the pathology of DIP?
Large numbers of alveolar macrophages in the alveoli
Interstitium is filled with lymphocytes, fibrosis is only mild and rarely progresses to honeycomb
What is the pathogenesis of DIP?
Similar to UIP, except more reliant on smoking as a stimulus for fibrosis and more reversible
What is NSIP and what are its two subtypes? Which has worse prognosis?
Nonspecific Interstitial Pneumonia -
Second most common interstitial lung disease, it is an IP that does not fit into any of the other histological categories
Subtypes:
Cellular - (closer to DIP)
Fibrotic - Worse prognosis (closer to UIP)
What does the pathology of NSIP look like / how does it differ from DIP / UIP?
Main difference is that the fibrosis and tissue damage is uniform across the lung rather than pleural or basilar (as in UIP), and there are no alveolar macrophage aggregates in alveoli (as in DIP)
What tends to aggregate in the cellular form of NSIP?
Lymphocytes tend to accumulate in the alveolar septae