Objective: To investigate the characteristics of airway involvement in relapsing polychondritis (RP).
Methods: The clinical data, including clinical manifestations, respiratory function test, computerized tomography (CT), and bronchoscopy of 38 out of the 56 RP patients who had airway involvement, 20 males and 18 females, with the mean onset age of 45 +/- 11 (27 - 71), and 3 RP patients without airway involvement were retrospectively analyzed. Three patients out of the 16 RP patients who did not have respiratory involvement but underwent respiratory function test, CT, and bronchoscopy were used as controls.
Results: The symptoms of airway involvement included cough, expectoration, hoarseness, feeling of suffocation, asthma, and dyspnea. Obstructive disturbance of ventilation was found in 10 and mixed disturbance of ventilation was seen in 2 of the 18 RP patients with airway involvement. The forced expiratory volume in one second, ratio of forced expiratory volume in one second to forced vital capacity, peak expiratory flow, FEF50/FIF50, and maximal mild-expiratory flow of the patients with airway involvement were 1.4 L +/- 0.23 L, 46.0 +/- 4.86, 3.3 L/s +/- 0.67 L/s, 0.3 +/- 0.08, and 0.4 L/s +/- 0.18 L/s respectively, all significantly lower than those of the RP patients without airway involvement (2.5 L +/- 0.09 L, 83.7 +/- 2.24, 6.9 L/s +/- 0.52 L/s, 1.3 +/- 0.51, and 2.8 L/s +/- 0.73 L/s, all P = 0.01). Flow volume loop showed remarkable decrease of PEF and formation of a plateau in the expiratory phase in the RP patients with airway involvement. CT performed in 27 RP patients with airway involvement showed trachea stenosis in 11, and thickened airway wall in 8 of them. Bronchoscopy performed in 23 patients with airway involvement showed inflammation in 16, destruction of tracheobronchial cartilage in 6, collapsed tracheobronchial wall in 7, tracheal stenosis in 15, left major bronchial stenosis in 13, and right major bronchial stenosis in 12 of them.
Conclusion: Respiratory function test is sensitive in early detection of airway involvement in RP. Bronchoscopy and CT are useful in evaluation of the severity of airway involvement in patients with RP.