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Arch. Pathol. Lab. Med. · Jan 2018
ReviewPathology of Chronic Hypersensitivity Pneumonitis: What Is It? What Are the Diagnostic Criteria? Why Do We Care?
- Andrew Churg, AnaMaria Bilawich, and Joanne L Wright.
- From the Departments of Pathology (Dr Churg) and Radiology (Dr Bilawich), Vancouver General Hospital and University of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada; and the Department of Pathology (Dr Wright), St Paul's Hospital and University of British Columbia, Vancouver.
- Arch. Pathol. Lab. Med. 2018 Jan 1; 142 (1): 109-119.
Context- Chronic hypersensitivity pneumonitis (CHP) has emerged from obscurity during the past 15 years and is now recognized as a very common form of fibrosing interstitial pneumonia but one that is frequently misdiagnosed both clinically and on surgical lung biopsy as usual interstitial pneumonia/idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (UIP/IPF) or fibrotic nonspecific interstitial pneumonia.Objective- To review the pathologic features of CHP.Data Sources- Clinical, pathology, and radiology literature were used.Conclusions- Upper lobe-predominant fibrosis and/or air-trapping on computed tomography scan are features of CHP but not UIP/IPF; however, radiologic separation is possible in only about 50% of cases. Morphologically, CHP sometimes mimics UIP/IPF, but CHP often shows isolated foci of peribronchiolar (centrilobular) fibrosis, frequently associated with fibroblast foci, and in CHP, fibrosis may bridge from the centrilobular region to another bronchiole, an interlobular septum, or the pleura ("bridging fibrosis"). This set of findings is uncommon in UIP/IPF. In addition, CHP may produce a picture of fibrotic nonspecific interstitial pneumonia. Although giant cells/granulomas are usually present in subacute hypersensitivity pneumonitis, they are much less frequently found in CHP, and their absence does not contradict the diagnosis. This diagnostic separation is clinically important because CHP is treated differently than UIP/IPF is (immunosuppressive agents versus antifibrotic agents); further, there are some data to suggest that removing the patient from antigen exposure improves outcome, and there is evidence that patients with CHP have a much better survival prognosis after lung transplantation than do patients with UIP/IPF. In most cases, accurate diagnosis of CHP requires consultation among clinicians, radiologists, and pathologists.
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