Cargando…

Coexisting Bronchogenic Carcinoma and Pulmonary Tuberculosis in the Same Lobe: Radiologic Findings and Clinical Significance

OBJECTIVE: Bronchogenic Carcinoma Can Mimic Or Be Masked By Pulmonary Tuberculosis (Tb), And The Aim Of This Study Was To Describe The Radiologic Findings And Clinical Significance Of Bronchogenic Carcinoma And Pulmonary Tb Which Coexist In The Same Lobe. MATERIALS AND METHODS: The findings of 51 pa...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Kim, Young Il, Goo, Jin Mo, Kim, Hyae Young, Song, Jae Woo, Im, Jung-Gi
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Korean Radiological Society 2001
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2718111/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/11752984
http://dx.doi.org/10.3348/kjr.2001.2.3.138
_version_ 1782169966522400768
author Kim, Young Il
Goo, Jin Mo
Kim, Hyae Young
Song, Jae Woo
Im, Jung-Gi
author_facet Kim, Young Il
Goo, Jin Mo
Kim, Hyae Young
Song, Jae Woo
Im, Jung-Gi
author_sort Kim, Young Il
collection PubMed
description OBJECTIVE: Bronchogenic Carcinoma Can Mimic Or Be Masked By Pulmonary Tuberculosis (Tb), And The Aim Of This Study Was To Describe The Radiologic Findings And Clinical Significance Of Bronchogenic Carcinoma And Pulmonary Tb Which Coexist In The Same Lobe. MATERIALS AND METHODS: The findings of 51 patients (48 males and three females, aged 48-79 years) in whom pulmonary TB and bronchogenic carcinoma coexisted in the same lobe were analyzed. The morphologic characteristics of a tumor, such as its diameter and margin, the presence of calcification or cavitation, and mediastinal lymphadenopathy, as seen at CT, were retrospectively assessed, and the clinical stage of the lung cancer was also determined. Using the serial chest radiographs available for 21 patients, the possible causes of delay in the diagnosis of lung cancer were analyzed. RESULTS: Lung cancers with coexisting pulmonary TB were located predominantly in the upper lobes (82.4%). The mean diameter of the mass was 5.3 cm, and most tumors (n=42, 82.4%) had a lobulated border. Calcification within the tumor was seen in 20 patients (39.2%), and cavitation in five (9.8%). Forty-two (82.4%) had mediastinal lymphadenopathy, and more than half the tumors (60.8%) were at an advanced stage [IIIB (n=11) or IV (n=20)]. The average delay in diagnosing lung cancer was 11.7 (range, 1-24) months, and the causes of this were failure to observe new nodules masked by coexisting stable TB lesions (n=8), misinterpretation of new lesions as aggravation of TB (n=5), misinterpretation of lung cancer as tuberculoma at initial radiography (n=4), masking of the nodule by an active TB lesion (n=3), and subtleness of the lesion (n=1). CONCLUSION: Most cancers concurrent with TB are large, lobulated masses with mediastinal lymphadenopathy, indicating that the morphologic characteristics of lung cancer with coexisting pulmonary TB are similar to those of lung cancer without TB. The diagnosis of lung cancer is delayed mainly because of masking by a tuberculous lesion, and this suggests that in patients in whom a predominant or growing nodule is present and who show little improvement of symptoms despite antituberculous or other medical therapy, coexisting cancer should be suspected.
format Text
id pubmed-2718111
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2001
publisher The Korean Radiological Society
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-27181112009-07-30 Coexisting Bronchogenic Carcinoma and Pulmonary Tuberculosis in the Same Lobe: Radiologic Findings and Clinical Significance Kim, Young Il Goo, Jin Mo Kim, Hyae Young Song, Jae Woo Im, Jung-Gi Korean J Radiol Original Article OBJECTIVE: Bronchogenic Carcinoma Can Mimic Or Be Masked By Pulmonary Tuberculosis (Tb), And The Aim Of This Study Was To Describe The Radiologic Findings And Clinical Significance Of Bronchogenic Carcinoma And Pulmonary Tb Which Coexist In The Same Lobe. MATERIALS AND METHODS: The findings of 51 patients (48 males and three females, aged 48-79 years) in whom pulmonary TB and bronchogenic carcinoma coexisted in the same lobe were analyzed. The morphologic characteristics of a tumor, such as its diameter and margin, the presence of calcification or cavitation, and mediastinal lymphadenopathy, as seen at CT, were retrospectively assessed, and the clinical stage of the lung cancer was also determined. Using the serial chest radiographs available for 21 patients, the possible causes of delay in the diagnosis of lung cancer were analyzed. RESULTS: Lung cancers with coexisting pulmonary TB were located predominantly in the upper lobes (82.4%). The mean diameter of the mass was 5.3 cm, and most tumors (n=42, 82.4%) had a lobulated border. Calcification within the tumor was seen in 20 patients (39.2%), and cavitation in five (9.8%). Forty-two (82.4%) had mediastinal lymphadenopathy, and more than half the tumors (60.8%) were at an advanced stage [IIIB (n=11) or IV (n=20)]. The average delay in diagnosing lung cancer was 11.7 (range, 1-24) months, and the causes of this were failure to observe new nodules masked by coexisting stable TB lesions (n=8), misinterpretation of new lesions as aggravation of TB (n=5), misinterpretation of lung cancer as tuberculoma at initial radiography (n=4), masking of the nodule by an active TB lesion (n=3), and subtleness of the lesion (n=1). CONCLUSION: Most cancers concurrent with TB are large, lobulated masses with mediastinal lymphadenopathy, indicating that the morphologic characteristics of lung cancer with coexisting pulmonary TB are similar to those of lung cancer without TB. The diagnosis of lung cancer is delayed mainly because of masking by a tuberculous lesion, and this suggests that in patients in whom a predominant or growing nodule is present and who show little improvement of symptoms despite antituberculous or other medical therapy, coexisting cancer should be suspected. The Korean Radiological Society 2001 2001-09-30 /pmc/articles/PMC2718111/ /pubmed/11752984 http://dx.doi.org/10.3348/kjr.2001.2.3.138 Text en Copyright © 2001 The Korean Radiological Society http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0) which permits unrestricted non-commercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Original Article
Kim, Young Il
Goo, Jin Mo
Kim, Hyae Young
Song, Jae Woo
Im, Jung-Gi
Coexisting Bronchogenic Carcinoma and Pulmonary Tuberculosis in the Same Lobe: Radiologic Findings and Clinical Significance
title Coexisting Bronchogenic Carcinoma and Pulmonary Tuberculosis in the Same Lobe: Radiologic Findings and Clinical Significance
title_full Coexisting Bronchogenic Carcinoma and Pulmonary Tuberculosis in the Same Lobe: Radiologic Findings and Clinical Significance
title_fullStr Coexisting Bronchogenic Carcinoma and Pulmonary Tuberculosis in the Same Lobe: Radiologic Findings and Clinical Significance
title_full_unstemmed Coexisting Bronchogenic Carcinoma and Pulmonary Tuberculosis in the Same Lobe: Radiologic Findings and Clinical Significance
title_short Coexisting Bronchogenic Carcinoma and Pulmonary Tuberculosis in the Same Lobe: Radiologic Findings and Clinical Significance
title_sort coexisting bronchogenic carcinoma and pulmonary tuberculosis in the same lobe: radiologic findings and clinical significance
topic Original Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2718111/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/11752984
http://dx.doi.org/10.3348/kjr.2001.2.3.138
work_keys_str_mv AT kimyoungil coexistingbronchogeniccarcinomaandpulmonarytuberculosisinthesameloberadiologicfindingsandclinicalsignificance
AT goojinmo coexistingbronchogeniccarcinomaandpulmonarytuberculosisinthesameloberadiologicfindingsandclinicalsignificance
AT kimhyaeyoung coexistingbronchogeniccarcinomaandpulmonarytuberculosisinthesameloberadiologicfindingsandclinicalsignificance
AT songjaewoo coexistingbronchogeniccarcinomaandpulmonarytuberculosisinthesameloberadiologicfindingsandclinicalsignificance
AT imjunggi coexistingbronchogeniccarcinomaandpulmonarytuberculosisinthesameloberadiologicfindingsandclinicalsignificance