Publications by authors named "Benjamin M Smith"

Background: Approximately 70% of adults with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) remain undiagnosed. Opportunistic screening using chest computed tomography (CT) scans, commonly acquired in clinical practice, may be used to improve COPD detection through simple, clinically applicable deep-learning models. We developed a lightweight, convolutional neural network (COPDxNet) that utilizes minimally processed chest CT scans to detect COPD.

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Objective: To investigate the longitudinal association between diabetes and changes in vertebral bone mineral density (BMD) derived from conventional chest CT and to evaluate whether kidney function (estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR)) modifies this relationship.

Materials And Methods: This longitudinal study included 1046 participants from the Multi-Ethnic Study of Atherosclerosis Lung Study with vertebral BMD measurements from chest CTs at Exam 5 (2010-2012) and Exam 6 (2016-2018). Diabetes was classified based on the American Diabetes Association criteria, and those with impaired fasting glucose (i.

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Background: Identification of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) diagnosed before 50 years of age ("young COPD") will help enable the study of preventive and therapeutic interventions for classically diagnosed COPD in later life. However, there remains uncertainty about the definition of young COPD and its prognostic significance.

Methods: We assessed the prevalence of young COPD, defined here as spirometric airflow obstruction plus symptoms of cough, phlegm, and dyspnea or 10 or more pack-years of smoking, among 18-to-49-year-old participants from four pooled, prospective U.

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Background: Whether metabolic syndrome (MetS) increases the risk of chronic lung diseases remains uncertain. We aimed to test whether MetS was associated with lung function and clinical respiratory outcomes.

Methods: Data were harmonised from six US general population-based prospective cohorts.

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Background: Early-life growth adversity is important to later-life health, but precision assessment in adulthood is challenging. We evaluated whether the difference between attained and genotype-predicted adult height ("height-GaP") would associate with prospectively ascertained early-life growth adversity and later-life all-cause and cardiovascular mortality.

Methods: Data were first analyzed from the Avon Longitudinal Study of Parents and Children (ALSPAC) and UKBiobank.

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Objective: Despite the established association between chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) severity and risk of osteoporosis, even after accounting for the known shared confounding variables (e.g., age, smoking, history of exacerbations, steroid use), there is paucity of data on bone loss among mild to moderate COPD, which is more prevalent in the general population.

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Discovering the biological basis of progression in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), especially of rapid decline (RD) in forced expiratory volume in 1 second, is essential to the development of precision therapies. First, we sought to define baseline characteristics of RD (⩾100 ml/yr), relative to participants with stable-to-improved (S/I) status or with intermediate decline (D)-categories based on spirometric data from the Framingham Offspring cohort. Second, we sought to examine these categories as predictors of longitudinal COPD outcomes, adjusting for baseline characteristics.

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Purpose: This study investigated asthma phenotypes and their associations with ventilation heterogeneity and particle deposition by utilizing Single-Photon Emission Computed Tomography (SPECT) imaging, quantitative Computed Tomography (qCT) imaging-based subgrouping, and a whole-lung computational model.

Materials And Methods: Two datasets were analyzed: one from a combined SPECT and CT (SPECT/CT) study with six asthmatic subjects, and another from the Severe Asthma Research Program (SARP) with 209 asthmatic subjects. Data from 35 previously acquired healthy subjects served as a control group.

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Antinuclear antibodies (ANA) are often found in ILD; whether ANA is associated with radiographic progression of quantitive interstitial lung changes is unknown. We performed longitudinal analyses of adults in the Multi-Ethnic Study of Atherosclerosis using linear mixed effects models with random intercept and slope to evaluate whether baseline ANA was associated with change in the amount of lung with high attenuation areas on CT (HAAs, percentage of imaged lung with -600 to -250 HU). In 6,638 subjects with 17,293 CT scans over 18 years, 741 (11 %) were ANA positive.

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High-resolution full lung CT scans now enable the detailed segmentation of airway trees up to the 6th branching generation. The airway binary masks display very complex tree structures that may encode biological information relevant to disease risk and yet remain challenging to exploit via traditional methods such as meshing or skeletonization. Recent clinical studies suggest that some variations in shape patterns and caliber of the human airway tree are highly associated with adverse health outcomes, including all-cause mortality and incident COPD.

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Article Synopsis
  • Aerobic exercise training is thought to not affect lung structure or function, but the study explores the link between pulmonary vascular health and exercise capacity (VO2peak).
  • Researchers examined data from participants in the CanCOLD study, looking at factors like CT blood vessel volumes and pulmonary diffusing capacity in different groups (never-smokers, ever-smokers, and those with COPD).
  • The findings indicate that aspects of pulmonary vascular structure and function are significantly related to VO2peak, even in individuals with COPD, suggesting these associations extend beyond just airflow limitations.
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Background: Lung structure and cardiac structure and function are associated cross-sectionally. The classic literature suggests relationships of airways disease to cor pulmonale and emphysema to reduced cardiac output (CO) but longitudinal data are lacking.

Methods: The Multi-Ethnic Study of Atherosclerosis (MESA) COPD Study was a multicentre longitudinal COPD case-control study of participants 50-79 years with ≥10 pack-years smoking without clinical cardiovascular disease.

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Robust quantification of pulmonary emphysema on computed tomography (CT) remains challenging for large-scale research studies that involve scans from different scanner types and for translation to clinical scans. Although the domain shifts in different CT scanners are subtle compared to shifts existing in other modalities (e.g.

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Article Synopsis
  • The SPIROMICS Study of Early COPD Progression (SOURCE) aims to investigate the biological reasons behind early-stage COPD in younger individuals who smoke, addressing a gap in current medical knowledge that hinders treatment development.
  • The study plans to enroll 649 participants aged 30-55 with a history of smoking, alongside 40 never-smoker controls, to collect comprehensive health data and analyze potential mechanisms of disease progression.
  • SOURCE seeks to use advanced imaging and biospecimen collection methods over three years to enhance understanding of COPD and contribute to better prevention and treatment strategies.
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Article Synopsis
  • Dysanapsis is the mismatch between airway size and lung size that can lead to COPD risk; it first appears early in life.
  • Researchers analyzed genetic factors linked to dysanapsis through a genome-wide association study involving over 11,000 adults.
  • They found specific genetic variants and developed a genetic risk score that correlated with obstructive lung function in both children and adults, suggesting dysanapsis may connect genetic factors to lung health issues across a person's life.
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Rates of emphysema progression vary in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), and the relationships with vascular and airway pathophysiology remain unclear. We sought to determine if indices of peripheral (segmental and beyond) pulmonary arterial dilation measured on computed tomography (CT) are associated with a 1-year index of emphysema (EI; percentage of voxels <-950 Hounsfield units) progression. Five hundred ninety-nine former and never-smokers (Global Initiative for Chronic Obstructive Lung Disease stages 0-3) were evaluated from the SPIROMICS (Subpopulations and Intermediate Outcome Measures in COPD Study) cohort: rapid emphysema progressors (RPs;  = 188, 1-year ΔEI > 1%), nonprogressors ( = 301, 1-year ΔEI ± 0.

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Smaller mean airway tree caliber is associated with airflow obstruction and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). We investigated whether airway tree caliber heterogeneity was associated with airflow obstruction and COPD. Two community-based cohorts (MESA Lung, CanCOLD) and a longitudinal case-control study of COPD (SPIROMICS) performed spirometry and computed tomography measurements of airway lumen diameters at standard anatomical locations (trachea-to-subsegments) and total lung volume.

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Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) and emphysema are associated with endothelial damage and altered pulmonary microvascular perfusion. The molecular mechanisms underlying these changes are poorly understood in patients, in part because of the inaccessibility of the pulmonary vasculature. Peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) interact with the pulmonary endothelium.

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Background: Mucus plugs have been described in the airways of asthmatic subjects, particularly those with associated with type 2 inflammation and sputum eosinophilia. In the current study we addressed the question of whether smoking, neutrophilic inflammation and airway dimensions affected the prevalence of mucus plugs.

Methods: In a cohort of moderate to severe asthmatics (n = 50), including a group of ex-smokers and current smokers, the prevalence of mucus plugs was quantified using a semi-quantitative score based on thoracic computerized tomography.

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Background: Computed tomography (CT) is increasingly used for assessing skeletal muscle characteristics. In cystic fibrosis (CF) and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), reduced limb muscle mass predicts poor clinical outcomes. However, the degree to which quantity or quality of respiratory and nonrespiratory muscles is affected by these diseases remains controversial.

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Cell size and cell count are adaptively regulated and intimately linked to growth and function. Yet, despite their widespread relevance, the relation between cell size and count has never been formally examined over the whole human body. Here, we compile a comprehensive dataset of cell size and count over all major cell types, with data drawn from >1,500 published sources.

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Importance: People who smoked cigarettes may experience respiratory symptoms without spirometric airflow obstruction. These individuals are typically excluded from chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) trials and lack evidence-based therapies.

Objective: To define the natural history of persons with tobacco exposure and preserved spirometry (TEPS) and symptoms (symptomatic TEPS).

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