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Radiological Characterization of Pulmonary Involvement in Patients With Hematological Diseases

Radiological Characterization of Pulmonary Involvement in Patients With Hematological Diseases

Status
Completed
Phases
Unknown
Study type
Observational
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT06350526
Enrollment
148
Registered
2024-04-05
Start date
2024-09-27
Completion date
2025-11-21
Last updated
2025-11-24

For informational purposes only — not medical advice. Sourced from public registries and may not reflect the latest updates. Terms

Conditions

Hematologic Diseases

Brief summary

Hematologic malignancies are heterogeneous groups of neoplasia, with frequent pulmonary complications. These complications may be secondary to the patient's comorbidities, to the hemopathy itself, or its treatments. Divided into infectious and non-infectious complications, the etiologies are numerous and varied. This makes the diagnostic approach complex for the clinicians

Detailed description

Although infectious processes of the lungs are common in these immunosuppressed patient collectives, non-infectious causes account for up to half of the pulmonary manifestations found in hematologic malignancies. Besides the frequent infections including opportunistic pathogens, a broad differential diagnosis including drug-induced lung injury by cytostatic substances, cytokines, and innovative immunotherapeutic agents, rarer transfusion of blood products, and intrathoracic manifestations of the hematologic malignancy itself, must be kept in mind. Finally, vascular complications can also lead to pulmonary reactions. Early and consistent diagnostics and treatment of bronchopulmonary, intrathoracic, and vascular complications within the framework of hematologic systemic diseases can be essential for the patient's prognosis. Up to 25% of patients with profound neutropenia lasting for \>10 days develop lung infiltrates, which frequently do not respond to broad-spectrum antibacterial therapy. While a causative pathogen remains undetected in most cases, Aspergillus spp., Pneumocystis jirovecii, multi-resistant Gram-negative pathogens, mycobacteria or respiratory viruses may be involved. In at-risk patients who have received trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole (TMP/SMX) prophylaxis, filamentous fungal pathogens appear to be predominant, yet commonly not proven at the time of treatment initiation. In patients who do not improve rapidly with first-line therapy with broad spectrum antibiotics, cross-sectional thoracic CT imaging is essential. It provides much better definition of the pattern of radiological changes that includes three main groups: consolidation, nodules (micro- and macro-), and diffuse changes, as ground glass pattern. Discuss these radiological patterns and how this guides the appropriate initial investigations and treatment options will be of a great value to be followed.

Interventions

DIAGNOSTIC_TESTComplete Blood Count

blood sample

DIAGNOSTIC_TESTC-reactive protein

serum sample

DIAGNOSTIC_TESTO2 saturation

blood sample

DIAGNOSTIC_TESTSerum ferritin and D-dimer

Blood sample

DIAGNOSTIC_TESTLiver and renal function tests

Blood sample

DIAGNOSTIC_TESTLactate dehydrogenase

Blood sample

DIAGNOSTIC_TESTcoronavirus (SARS-CoV-2) swab

Throat swab

RADIATIONCT chest

Radiation

Sponsors

New Valley University
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Observational model
CASE_ONLY
Time perspective
RETROSPECTIVE

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
ALL
Age
18 Years to No maximum
Healthy volunteers
No

Inclusion criteria

* All patients aged 18 years or older diagnosed with hematological diseases and documented pulmonary manifestations during their disease course

Exclusion criteria

1. Patients aged under 18 years. 2. Patients without demonstrable evidence of lung involvement. 3. Patients with incomplete medical records or insufficient data to analyze.

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frame
Number of patients who had certain radiological patterns associated with pulmonary complications in patients diagnosed with various hematological diseasesOnce through the study

Secondary

MeasureTime frame
Number of patients who developed complicationsOnce through the study

Countries

Egypt

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Feb 4, 2026