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Presentation, Diagnosis, and Management of Subglottic and Tracheal Stenosis During Systemic Inflammatory Diseases

Authors :
François Gonin
Alexis Régent
Luc Mouthon
Véronique Le Guern
Candice Lacroix
Emmanuel Martinod
André Coste
Paul Legendre
Benjamin Terrier
Xavier Puéchal
Pascal Cohen
J. Catano
Jérémie Dion
Yurdagul Uzunhan
Romain Paule
Christine Lorut
Sophie Périé
Source :
Chest. 161:257-265
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2022.

Abstract

Background Subglottic stenosis (SGS) and tracheal stenosis (TS) are characterized by a narrowing of the airways. The goal of this study was to describe the characteristics and prognosis of nontraumatic and nontumoral SGS or TS. Research Question What are the inflammatory etiologies of SGS and TS, and what are their characteristics and prognosis? Study Design and Methods This multicenter, observational retrospective study was performed in patients with SGS or TS that was neither traumatic nor tumoral. Results Eighty-one patients were included, 33 (41%) with granulomatosis with polyangiitis (GPA) and 21 (26%) with relapsing polychondritis (RP). GPA-related stenoses exhibited circumferential subglottic narrowing in 85% of cases, without calcifications. In contrast, RP-related stenoses displayed anterior involvement in 76%, in a longer distance from vocal cords (4 cm), with calcifications in 62%, and extension to bronchi in 86%. Other diagnoses included bullous dermatoses (n = 3), amyloidosis (n = 3), sarcoidosis (n = 2), and Crohn’s disease (n = 2); the remaining stenoses (n = 15) were idiopathic. SGS/TS was the initial manifestation of the disease in 66% of cases, with a median interval from stenosis to disease diagnosis of 12 months (interquartile range, 0-48 months). Despite the use of glucocorticoids in 80%, combined with methotrexate in 49%, endoscopic procedures were required in 68% of patients. Relapses of stenoses occurred in 76% without any difference between causes (82% in GPA, 67% in RP, and 75% in idiopathic SGS/TS). Three patients died due to the stenosis, two of RP and one of GPA. Interpretation These data show that GPA and RP are the two main inflammatory diseases presenting with SGS/TS. GPA-related stenoses are mostly subglottic and circumferential, whereas RP-related stenoses are mostly tracheal, anterior, and calcified with a frequent extension to bronchi. Relapses of stenoses are common, and relapse rates do not differ between causes. Diagnosis and management of SGS/TS require a multidisciplinary approach.

Details

ISSN :
00123692
Volume :
161
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Chest
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....0020faa85f8abfdc274dfae484c9db65
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.chest.2021.07.037