Background
Despite the
relationship between idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF) and
advancing age, little is known about the epidemiology of interstitial
lung disease (ILD) in the elderly. We describe the diagnoses,
clinical characteristics, and outcomes of patients who were elderly
at the time of ILD diagnosis.
Methods
Among subjects from
a prospective cohort study of ILD, elderly was defined as age ≥ 70
years. Diagnoses were derived from a multidisciplinary review.
Differences between elderly and nonelderly groups were determined
using the χ2 test and analysis of variance.
Results
Of the 327 subjects
enrolled, 80 (24%) were elderly. The majority of elderly subjects
were white men. The most common diagnoses were unclassifiable ILD
(45%), IPF (34%), connective tissue disease (CTD)-ILD (11%), and
hypersensitivity pneumonitis (8%). Most elderly subjects (74%) with
unclassifiable ILD had an imaging pattern inconsistent with usual
interstitial pneumonia (UIP). There were no significant differences
in pulmonary function or 3-year mortality between nonelderly and
elderly subjects combined or in a subgroup analysis of those with
IPF.
Conclusions
Although IPF was the
single most common diagnosis, the majority of elderly subjects had
non-IPF ILD. Our findings highlight the need for every patient with
new-onset ILD, regardless of age, to be surveyed for exposures and
findings of CTD. Unclassifiable ILD was common among the elderly, but
for most, the radiographic pattern was inconsistent with UIP.
Although the effect of ILD may be more pronounced in the elderly due
to reduced global functionality, ILD was not more severe or
aggressive in this group.
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