Clinical, radiological, and pathological evaluation of “NSIP with OP overlap” pattern compared with NSIP in patients with idiopathic interstitial pneumonias

2020 
Abstract Background Nonspecific interstitial pneumonia (NSIP) and organizing pneumonia (OP) are major subtypes of idiopathic interstitial pneumonias (IIPs) and closely related to connective tissue diseases (CTDs). “NSIP with OP overlap” is a controversial finding that has recently appeared in the criteria of interstitial pneumonia with autoimmune features (IPAF). However, details of this controversial entity are not well known. Objective To determine the frequency of “NSIP with OP overlap” pattern in IIPs and to identify differences from idiopathic NSIP (iNSIP). Methods In 524 patients with interstitial pneumonia from 39 institutes who underwent surgical lung biopsy, 444 were diagnosed as IIPs by a multidisciplinary discussion meeting via a cloud-based integrated database. Among these patients, 44 (9.9%) who had iNSIP and 21 (4.7%) with histopathologically-defined “NSIP with OP overlap” pattern (a pathological NSIP and OP pattern, but without a UIP pattern) were retrospectively studied. Results Patients with “NSIP with OP overlap” pattern showed a significantly greater extent of consolidation (p  Conclusions The incidence of “NSIP with OP overlap” pattern is 4.7% in IIPs. The frequency of newly-developed CTDs during follow-up, mainly polymyositis/dermatomyositis, the frequency of acute exacerbation, and the survival rate in “NSIP with OP overlap” pattern are similar to those of iNSIP.
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