Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease-associated expiratory central airway collapse: current concepts and new perspectives

Chest. 2024 Nov 21:S0012-3692(24)05587-9. doi: 10.1016/j.chest.2024.11.015. Online ahead of print.

Abstract

Topic importance: Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD)-associated expiratory central airway collapse (ECAC) is a frequently overlooked benign airway obstructive disease, with complex causes and unclear pathological and physiological mechanisms. Although interventions such as noninvasive positive pressure ventilation, airway stenting, and tracheobronchoplasty have shown definite efficacy in the treatment of COPD-associated ECAC, the diagnosis and treatment of this disease remain challenging. This article provides a systematic evaluation and outlook of the epidemiology, etiology, pathophysiology, clinical manifestations, diagnosis, treatment of COPD-associated ECAC.

Review findings: COPD-associated ECAC is a benign airway narrowing disease with atypical clinical symptoms and unknown incidence and pathogenesis. Bronchoscopy is considered the gold standard technique for diagnosis of COPD-associated ECAC, with dynamic biphasic CT as an alternative noninvasive method. Noninvasive ventilation treatment can be continued long-term. Temporary airway stents can alleviate acute and severe TBM. long-term stent implantation can be considered after a risk-benefit assessment. Although TBP has a definite therapeutic effect in patients with severe TBM, perioperative complications remain a serious issue, and its long-term efficacy observation is required. TCM, other PEP therapies, and lung transplantation have shown potential with limited evidence.

Summary: Although COPD -associated ECAC is attracting considerable attention, its pathophysiological mechanisms, diagnosis, and management are full of challenges. In the future, RCTs on different therapies using patient-centered outcomes, cost-effective analysis on different interventions, and consensus guidelines on COPD-associated ECAC are urgently needed.

Keywords: chronic obstructive pulmonary disease; current concepts; excessive dynamic airway collapse; new perspectives; tracheobronchomalacia.

Publication types

  • Review