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Acute fibrinous and organizing pneumonia
Author(s) -
R. P. Gomes,
Eva Padrão,
Hans Dabó,
Filipa Soares Pires,
Patrícia Caetano Mota,
Natália Melo,
José Miguel Jesus,
Rui Cunha,
Susana Guimarães,
Conceição Souto Moura,
António Morais
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
medicine
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.59
H-Index - 148
eISSN - 1536-5964
pISSN - 0025-7974
DOI - 10.1097/md.0000000000004073
Subject(s) - medicine , biopsy , ground glass opacity , lung , interstitial lung disease , radiology , lung biopsy , pneumonia , surgery , adenocarcinoma , cancer
Abstract Introduction Acute fibrinous and organizing pneumonia (AFOP) is a rare diffuse pulmonary disease, but it is not yet known whether it is a distinct form of interstitial pneumonia or simply a reflection of a tissue sampling issue. Methods Cross-sectional evaluation of clinical and radiological findings, treatments, and outcomes for patients with histologically confirmed AFOP at a tertiary university hospital between 2002 and 2015. Results Thirteen patients (7 women, 53.8%) with a mean ± SD age of 53.5 ± 16.1 years were included. The main symptoms were fever (69.2%), cough (46.2%), and chest pain (30.8%). All patients presented a radiological pattern of consolidation and 5 (38.5%) had simultaneous ground-glass areas. Histology was obtained by computed tomography-guided transthoracic biopsy in 61.5% of cases and by surgical lung biopsy in the remaining cases. Several potential etiologic factors were identified. Eight patients (61.5%) had hematologic disorders and 3 had undergone an autologous hematopoietic cell transplant. Two (15.4%) had microbiologic isolates, 5 (38.4%) had drug-induced lung toxicity, and 2 (15.4%) were classified as having idiopathic AFOP. In addition to antibiotics and diuretics used to treat the underlying disease, the main treatment was corticosteroids, combined in some cases with immunosuppressants. Median survival was 78 months and 6 patients (46.2%) were still alive at the time of analysis. Conclusion Our findings for this series of patients confirm that AFOP is a nonspecific reaction to various agents with a heterogeneous clinical presentation and clinical course that seems to be influenced mainly by the severity of the underlying disorder.

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