TY - JOUR
T1 - Reliability of crackles in fibrotic interstitial lung disease: a prospective, longitudinal study
AU - Sgalla, Giacomo
AU - Simonetti, Jacopo
AU - Di Bartolomeo, Arianna
AU - Magrì, Tonia
AU - Iovene, Bruno
AU - Pasciuto, Giuliana
AU - Dell'Ariccia, Ruben
AU - Varone, Francesco
AU - Comes, Alessia
AU - Leone, Paolo Maria
AU - Piluso, Venere
AU - Perrotta, Alessandro
AU - Cicchetti, Giuseppe
AU - Verdirosi, Diana
AU - Richeldi, Luca
PY - 2024
Y1 - 2024
N2 - BackgroundAlthough crackles on chest auscultation represent a fundamental component of the diagnostic suspect for fibrotic interstitial lung disease (ILD), their reliability has not been properly studied. We assessed the agreement among respiratory physicians on the presence and changes over time of audible crackles collected in a prospective longitudinal cohort of patients with fibrotic ILD.MethodsLung sounds were digitally recorded at baseline and after 12 months at eight anatomical sites. Nine respiratory physicians blindly assessed randomized couples of recordings obtained from the same anatomical site at different timepoints. The physicians indicated the presence of crackles in individual recordings and which recording from each couple eventually had more intense crackles. Fleiss' kappa coefficient was used to measure inter- and intra-rater agreement.ResultsFifty-two patients, mostly with a diagnosis of IPF (n = 40, 76.9%) were prospectively enrolled between October 2019 and May 2021. The final acoustic dataset included 702 single recordings, corresponding to 351 couples of recordings from baseline and 12-months timepoints. Kappa coefficient was 0.57 (95% CI 0.55-0.58) for the presence of crackles and 0.42 (95% CI 0.41-0.43) for acoustic change. Intra-rater agreement, measured for three respiratory physicians on three repeated assessments, ranged from good to excellent for the presence of crackles (kappa = 0.87, kappa = 0.86, kappa = 0.79), and from moderate to good for acoustic change (kappa = 0.75, kappa = 0.76, kappa = 0.57).ConclusionsAgreement between respiratory physicians for the presence of crackles and acoustic change was acceptable, suggesting that crackles represent a reliable acoustic finding in patients with fibrotic ILD. Their role as a lung-derived indicator of disease progression merits further studies.
AB - BackgroundAlthough crackles on chest auscultation represent a fundamental component of the diagnostic suspect for fibrotic interstitial lung disease (ILD), their reliability has not been properly studied. We assessed the agreement among respiratory physicians on the presence and changes over time of audible crackles collected in a prospective longitudinal cohort of patients with fibrotic ILD.MethodsLung sounds were digitally recorded at baseline and after 12 months at eight anatomical sites. Nine respiratory physicians blindly assessed randomized couples of recordings obtained from the same anatomical site at different timepoints. The physicians indicated the presence of crackles in individual recordings and which recording from each couple eventually had more intense crackles. Fleiss' kappa coefficient was used to measure inter- and intra-rater agreement.ResultsFifty-two patients, mostly with a diagnosis of IPF (n = 40, 76.9%) were prospectively enrolled between October 2019 and May 2021. The final acoustic dataset included 702 single recordings, corresponding to 351 couples of recordings from baseline and 12-months timepoints. Kappa coefficient was 0.57 (95% CI 0.55-0.58) for the presence of crackles and 0.42 (95% CI 0.41-0.43) for acoustic change. Intra-rater agreement, measured for three respiratory physicians on three repeated assessments, ranged from good to excellent for the presence of crackles (kappa = 0.87, kappa = 0.86, kappa = 0.79), and from moderate to good for acoustic change (kappa = 0.75, kappa = 0.76, kappa = 0.57).ConclusionsAgreement between respiratory physicians for the presence of crackles and acoustic change was acceptable, suggesting that crackles represent a reliable acoustic finding in patients with fibrotic ILD. Their role as a lung-derived indicator of disease progression merits further studies.
KW - Crackles
KW - Pulmonary fibrosis
KW - Lung sounds
KW - Interstitial lung disease
KW - Crackles
KW - Pulmonary fibrosis
KW - Lung sounds
KW - Interstitial lung disease
UR - http://hdl.handle.net/10807/297125
U2 - 10.1186/s12931-024-02979-9
DO - 10.1186/s12931-024-02979-9
M3 - Article
SN - 1465-993X
VL - 25
SP - 2
EP - 11
JO - Respiratory Research
JF - Respiratory Research
ER -