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WTC Chest CT Imaging Archive

WTC Chest CT Imaging Archive

Recruiting
18 years and older
All
Phase N/A

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Overview

Dr. Rafael E de la Hoz and colleagues have performed standardized and computer-assisted readings of all chest CT scans received by WTC workers and volunteers at the Mount Sinai Medical Center between 2003 and 2016. The clinical team sought to assess all findings suggestive of airway, interstitial, and neoplastic disease in a systematic way, and correlate those findings with clinical, functional, and exposure indicators. The study team's research will also involve analyses of longitudinal imaging and functional trends, and characterization of the WTC related lower airway diseases and their risk factors, with a focus on obesity-related imaging markers. The study team also plans to characterize the transitions into chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) among these workers.

The researchers also propose to test the use of added respiratory surveillance tools and explore functional markers of disease progression, explore alternate methods to investigate longitudinal functional trajectories, and novel spirometry calibration methods that might facilitate the implementation of spirometry in nonspecialized settings.

Description

The goal of this proposal is to characterize WTC-related lower airway disorders, and use novel imaging approaches to the investigation of obesity, one of their most important risk factors for poor clinical outcome and chronicity. To that end, the clinical team will utilize the WTC Pulmonary Evaluation Unit Chest CT Imaging Archive, an already established large imaging database, linked to extensive related databases that include disease symptoms, both pre-WTC and WTC-related occupational exposures, detailed pulmonary function and longitudinal spirometry measurements, visual imaging classification and grading, and quantitative computer assisted method (QCAM) measurements of airway, pulmonary parenchymal, pleural, and cardiovascular abnormalities. During the course of the proposed research project, the clinical team will continue to enrich most sources of data with periodic updates, in order to accrue information on the trajectories of the different clinical, functional, and imaging abnormalities observed in this population, and investigate the role of key adverse risk factors directly, and in collaboration with other investigators. In a related project, the research team will focus on COPD, classifying its severity, investigating its diagnostic stability, progression, and transitions, characterize structural abnormalities as assessed by chest CT imaging, and examine the interaction of WTC-related exposure levels with tobacco smoking on increasing the risk of for the disease.

Grant U01 OH010401 was renewed to 6/30/2026.

Grant U01 OH011697 proposes (1) to establish the quantitative computed tomography (QCT) characteristics that may differentiate WTC-related from non-WTC-related COPD, (2) investigate characteristics and longitudinal lung function trajectories of WTC patients with pre-COPD, and (3) investigate lung mechanical strain (LMS) as an early QCT marker of lung injury associated with chronic disease and accelerated longitudinal lung function decline.

Grant U01 OH012782-01-00 proposes (1) to test the use of added respiratory surveillance tools (diffusion capacity and forced oscillometry) and explore functional markers of disease progression, (2) explore alternate methods to investigate longitudinal functional trajectories, and (3) novel spirometry calibration methods that might facilitate the implementation of spirometry in nonspecialized settings.

Eligibility

Inclusion Criteria:

  • All subjects will be participants in the screening/monitoring (SMP) and treatment program (TP) sides of the WTC Health Plan Clinical Center Excellence at Mount Sinai Medical Center, the major site, by far of the NY/NJ consortium of this program.

Exclusion Criteria:

  • Special vulnerable populations, such as fetuses, neonates, pregnant women, children, prisoners, institutionalized individuals, will not be involved in this research study.

Study details
    Chronic Airway Disease
    Interstitial Lung Disease
    Lung Cancer

NCT03295279

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

2 April 2025

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