Clinical features and outcomes of childhood interstitial lung disease: a tertiary center experience
Ayyüce ÜNLÜ, Şule Selin AKYAN SOYDAŞ, Satı ÖZKAN TABAKÇI, Işıl BİLGİÇ, Meltem KÜRTÜL ÇAKAR, Gamze AKCA DİNÇ, Hande YETİŞGİN, Çelebi YILDIRIM, Gökçen Dilşa TUĞCU, Dilber ADEMHAN TURAL, Sanem ERYILMAZ POLAT, Güzin CİNEL

TL;DR
This study examines the clinical features and outcomes of childhood interstitial lung disease in a Turkish cohort, emphasizing hypoxia as a key predictor of instability.
Contribution
The study provides a detailed analysis of a large Turkish pediatric chILD cohort using the chILD-EU classification framework.
Findings
Hypoxia was the strongest independent predictor of clinical instability in chILD patients.
Surfactant dysfunction disorders and immune/environmental diseases were the most common subtypes identified.
Ground-glass opacities were the most frequent radiological finding in chest CT scans.
Abstract
Childhood interstitial lung diseases (chILD) constitute a rare and clinically complex group of disorders. This study aimed to characterize the clinical, radiological, and genetic features, as well as the outcomes, of chILD in a Turkish cohort classified according to the chILD-EU framework. We retrospectively reviewed the medical records of 84 pediatric patients diagnosed with chILD between 2017 and 2024 at a tertiary referral center in Türkiye. Patients were categorized according to the chILD-EU classification. Clinical variables, imaging findings, genetic analyses, pulmonary function test results, and Fan severity scores were systematically assessed. Logistic regression analysis was performed to identify independent predictors of clinical instability. The median age at diagnosis was 6.0 years (IQR: 1.1–12.9). Surfactant dysfunction disorders (A4) and immune- or environmental-related…
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Taxonomy
TopicsNeonatal Respiratory Health Research · Interstitial Lung Diseases and Idiopathic Pulmonary Fibrosis · Cystic Fibrosis Research Advances
