Objective: To correlate lung density measurements with the results of visual assessment of thin-section computed tomography (CT) and of pulmonary function tests (PFT) in Systemic Sclerosis (SSc).
Methods: Thirty-nine SSc patients underwent sequential thin-section CT and spiral low-dose whole-lung acquisitions. The thin-section CT scans were evaluated with a dedicated visual scale. Mean lung density, skewness, and kurtosis were calculated from the lung density histogram. In addition from the spiral low-dose acquisition, the lung volume was computed. The visual score, the densitometric parameters, and the lung volume were correlated with the PFT.
Results: Mean lung density, skewness, and kurtosis computed from thin-section (R = 0,66; R = -0,74; R = -0,75) and low-dose volumetric (R = 0,72; R = -0,71; R = -0,71) CT and the lung volume (R = -0.54) correlated with the visual score. Densitometric values and lung volume consistently better correlated with PFT than the visual score.
Conclusions: In SSc the histogram results are more closely correlated to PFT than the visual score. The low-dose spiral CT seems ideal for longitudinal studies.