Idiopathic interstitial pneumonias

Last revised by Joshua Yap on 20 Jul 2022

The idiopathic interstitial pneumonias (IIPs) are diffuse interstitial lung diseases of unknown cause. They are characterised by cellular infiltration of the interstitial compartment of the lung with varying degrees of inflammation and fibrosis.

Classification

Over the years many attempts have been made to reach a consensus on classification of the idiopathic interstitial pneumonias (IIPs). This imposed a great deal of confusion and difficulty not only for clinicians and radiologists but also medical students.  The most recent widely accepted classification was developed by the American Thoracic Society (ATS) and the European Respiratory Society (ERS) in 2002 and revised in 2013. The initial classification was mainly based on the histologic findings and divided IIPs into seven subtypes:

In the revised version, a multidisciplinary approach with integration of all information provided by HRCT chest, clinical findings and course of the disease, as well as histopathologic correlation is used to reach the final diagnosis. Even after exhausting all inputs, if clear distinction cannot be made (e.g. even on biopsy, histologic features of more than one subtype may be present) the diagnosis is then considered as "unclassifiable" IIP. 

In the 2013 ATS/ERS revision, IIPs are assigned into four major groups:

Radiographic features

Optimal imaging protocol for assessment of patients with suspected IIP is crucial and should be adjusted in each case. Traditional non-contiguous HRCT chest is widely replaced by volumetric image acquisition mainly due to better assessment of the distribution, apicobasal gradient, patchiness of the disease, presence of bronchiectasis, or pulmonary nodules. Ideal acquisition time is at the end of full inspiration when total lung capacity is reached.

Multi-detector HRCT chest with thin collimation and sharp preprocessing algorithm (bone algorithm) and thin (less than 2 mm) multiplanar reconstruction is desired. Prone images are helpful to exclude dependent atelectasis obscuring or mistaken for underlying peripheral fibrotic changes.

Expiratory images, usually in non-contiguous acquisition, is crucial to assess air trapping which usually implies alternative diagnosis such as hypersensitivity pneumonitis rather than IIP.  

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