Our study describes the presence and behavior of PFNs in a routine, non-screening population. Our results show that incidental PFNs on routine care chest imaging do not represent lung cancer, underlining prior results in lung cancer-screening participants.
PFNs are regularly encountered in daily practice, in a population that differs significantly from lung cancer-screening cohorts. It was previously reported that none of the PFNs that were evaluated in screening populations turned out to be malignant after several years of follow-up [5, 8]. It has since been assumed that this result could be extrapolated to clinical subjects, as shown by the incorporation into current nodule management guidelines for clinical use [3, 4]. However, to our knowledge this has never been tested. In the present study, out of the 262 evaluated PFNs, none were traced to a lung malignancy in follow-up. Although a single-centre study, our results support that PFNs are not lung cancer, a claim that is indeed valid in a broader spectrum of subjects. Our data therefore further strengthen the idea that when a lung nodule is encountered that morphologically conforms to a PFN, it is safe not to induce follow-up.
Currently, the ACCP guidelines [2] and the screening-focused Lung-RADS [1] do not separately discuss PFNs, and thus classify them as small solid pulmonary nodules at risk for lung cancer. Therefore, a PFN will induce unnecessary follow-up similar to a non-PFN nodule of the same size. The new Fleischner document and British Thoracic Society (BTS) guidelines do distinguish PFNs as a separate and non-malignant entity [3, 4]. However, the Fleischner document does not apply in subjects with a prior malignancy [3], patients which BTS does include, although based on low-level evidence. Depending on the practice, subjects with a prior malignancy can make up a substantial percentage of all subjects that receive CT imaging. Since our study also included subjects with prior malignancies, our data add significantly to the available literature by showing that in this subpopulation too PFNs do not represent lung cancer. It has to be emphasised, however, that our study is unable to indicate whether or not a PFN can contain a metastasis, since our outcome data only provided information on whether a patient developed a primary lung malignancy or not. Future research should elucidate this through prospective long-term follow-up of PFNs in patients with specific malignancies.
In the present study, we also looked into PFN size and growth. Most of the evaluated PFNs are rather small with a median of 4.6 mm and 51 mm3. It has to be noted that even this is an overestimation, given that we used a lower threshold of 4 mm in this study. Nevertheless, about a quarter of the PFNs were 80 mm3 or larger and about a third were 5 mm or larger, which are for example the cut-off values used for follow-up of solid nodules in the BTS guidelines [4]. Thus, it is not uncommon to encounter somewhat larger PFNs, and this should not be a reason to reject the diagnosis and suspect a lung cancer.
Although longitudinal imaging was available in only a small subset of cases, we found growth in some PFNs, sometimes even at a substantial growth rate. This is in line with previous screening-based literature [5, 8]. Growth is supposedly related to the fact that PFNs most likely represent intrapulmonary lymph nodes [3, 5], which may show reactive changes. While any growing lesion should raise concern and warrant closer inspection, our study underlines that PFN growth does not increase the likelihood of lung cancer, not even if the growth rate falls within the range generally accepted to indicate malignant growth [12]. Widespread knowledge on possible growth of PFNs might prevent unnecessary follow-up and additional imaging techniques, with associated costs and (radiation) burden. However, further evaluation of growth in clinically detected PFNs should be performed in future studies.
Another characteristic that we could reproduce in our non-screening study population is that PFNs are more often found in the lower part of the lungs [6, 8, 13]. This in contrast to an upper lobe location more often seen in lung malignancies [14]. Nevertheless, upper versus lower lobe location does not reliably differentiate between a benign or malignant nature of a nodule. This also applies for the (peri)fissural or juxtapleural location [3, 5, 15]. It is therefore important to emphasise that nodule morphology remains the only parameter for distinguishing benign PFNs from possibly malignant lesions.
Regarding nodule presence, we found that there was no relation to other chest CT biomarkers or age. In our cohort a slight male preponderence was found, a finding not reported in a previous screening-based study [8]. We cannot explain this finding with certainty, but believe that gender does not influence PFN characterisation. Given that PFNs are overall seen equally in cases and controls, in subjects with or without prior malignancies, and that there is no association with bronchitis, emphysema, vascular calcifications or mediastinal lymphadenopathy, it is likely a rather randomly occurring entity without prognostic or predictive value. We did found that subjects with hilar/mediastinal lymphadenopathy more often showed multiplicity of PFNs in the lung, which might represent their reactive nature.
The strength of this study is that it evaluates PFNs outside a lung cancer-screening setting, confirming in a daily-routine, heterogeneous population that they do not represent lung cancer. This includes patients with incident lung cancers as well as non-cancer subjects with or without prior extra-pulmonary malignancies.
Our study has several limitations. First, it had a retrospective study design with related heterogeneity of imaging protocols. For the sole purpose of PFN identification, however, we feel this is not a major factor. Nearly all included examinations were thin-slice images that allow good evaluation of small nodules in different reconstruction planes. Heterogeneity of imaging protocols may have had some influence on nodule segmentation. Given that PFNs were often small, limited segmentation differences may account for some of the observed growth. Second, results might have been influenced by the interpretation of lung nodule type in this single-observer study. We have given a clear definition of what was regarded a PFN versus a non-PFN lesion; however, some variation in interpretation is to be expected on a nodule-to-nodule basis. As far as we know, interobserver variability in PFN determination is currently not known, but it is well known from other lung nodule interpretation tasks that observer variation exists. Although some misclassification might thus be present in our study, separation between typical or atypical PFNs was not of importance in this study, and none of our PFNs turned out to be malignant. Third, our study had to rely on the National Cancer Registry for outcome data. This is less optimal than a study with several consecutive (screening) rounds and prospective follow-up. Due to this design, vital status was available for cases but not for controls, which overestimates their follow-up period. Nevertheless, the National Cancer Registry centrally registers all cancer cases in The Netherlands, irrespective of hospital. So, although control subjects may have died earlier than the end of our study period, we do know they did not develop lung cancer. Last, we do not have pathological evidence of the benign nature of all PFNs. Theoretically, a growing PFN could be based on a metastasis; however, evidence on that is anecdotal in the literature [16,17,18] and none grew continuously.
In conclusion, our study evaluates PFN presence and behaviour in a daily-routine, heterogeneous population. Results show that PFNs do not represent lung cancer, confirming prior results from lung cancer-screening studies. Given that small non-calcified nodules are a frequently encountered entity in every practice, and that a substantial percentage of these nodules represents a PFN, a leave-alone strategy substantially influences nodule management practice and reduces the number of follow-up CT examinations significantly.