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Dive into the research topics where Joyce Schroeder is active.

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Featured researches published by Joyce Schroeder.


Respiratory Research | 2011

The clinical features of the overlap between COPD and asthma

Megan Hardin; Edwin K. Silverman; R. Graham Barr; Nadia N. Hansel; Joyce Schroeder; Barry J. Make; James D. Crapo; Craig P. Hersh

BackgroundThe coexistence of COPD and asthma is widely recognized but has not been well described. This study characterizes clinical features, spirometry, and chest CT scans of smoking subjects with both COPD and asthma.MethodsWe performed a cross-sectional study comparing subjects with COPD and asthma to subjects with COPD alone in the COPDGene Study.Results119 (13%) of 915 subjects with COPD reported a history of physician-diagnosed asthma. These subjects were younger (61.3 vs 64.7 years old, p = 0.0001) with lower lifetime smoking intensity (43.7 vs 55.1 pack years, p = 0.0001). More African-Americans reported a history of asthma (33.6% vs 15.6%, p < 0.0001). Subjects with COPD and asthma demonstrated worse disease-related quality of life, were more likely to have had a severe COPD exacerbation in the past year, and were more likely to experience frequent exacerbations (OR 3.55 [2.19, 5.75], p < 0.0001). Subjects with COPD and asthma demonstrated greater gas-trapping on chest CT. There were no differences in spirometry or CT measurements of emphysema or airway wall thickness.ConclusionSubjects with COPD and asthma represent a relevant clinical population, with worse health-related quality of life. They experience more frequent and severe respiratory exacerbations despite younger age and reduced lifetime smoking history.Trial registrationClinicalTrials.gov: NCT00608764


COPD: Journal of Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease | 2012

A combined pulmonary -radiology workshop for visual evaluation of COPD: study design, chest CT findings and concordance with quantitative evaluation

R. Graham Barr; Eugene Berkowitz; Francesca Bigazzi; Frederick Bode; Jessica Bon; Russell P. Bowler; Caroline Chiles; James D. Crapo; Gerard J. Criner; Jeffrey L. Curtis; Asger Dirksen; Mark T. Dransfield; Goutham Edula; Leif Erikkson; Adam L. Friedlander; Warren B. Gefter; David S. Gierada; P. Grenier; Jonathan G. Goldin; MeiLan K. Han; Nadia N. Hansel; Francine L. Jacobson; Hans-Ulrich Kauczor; Vuokko L. Kinnula; David A. Lipson; David A. Lynch; William MacNee; Barry J. Make; A. James Mamary; Howard Mann

Abstract The purposes of this study were: to describe chest CT findings in normal non-smoking controls and cigarette smokers with and without COPD; to compare the prevalence of CT abnormalities with severity of COPD; and to evaluate concordance between visual and quantitative chest CT (QCT) scoring. Methods: Volumetric inspiratory and expiratory CT scans of 294 subjects, including normal non-smokers, smokers without COPD, and smokers with GOLD Stage I-IV COPD, were scored at a multi-reader workshop using a standardized worksheet. There were 58 observers (33 pulmonologists, 25 radiologists); each scan was scored by 9–11 observers. Interobserver agreement was calculated using kappa statistic. Median score of visual observations was compared with QCT measurements. Results: Interobserver agreement was moderate for the presence or absence of emphysema and for the presence of panlobular emphysema; fair for the presence of centrilobular, paraseptal, and bullous emphysema subtypes and for the presence of bronchial wall thickening; and poor for gas trapping, centrilobular nodularity, mosaic attenuation, and bronchial dilation. Agreement was similar for radiologists and pulmonologists. The prevalence on CT readings of most abnormalities (e.g. emphysema, bronchial wall thickening, mosaic attenuation, expiratory gas trapping) increased significantly with greater COPD severity, while the prevalence of centrilobular nodularity decreased. Concordances between visual scoring and quantitative scoring of emphysema, gas trapping and airway wall thickening were 75%, 87% and 65%, respectively. Conclusions: Despite substantial inter-observer variation, visual assessment of chest CT scans in cigarette smokers provides information regarding lung disease severity; visual scoring may be complementary to quantitative evaluation.


American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine | 2013

Computed Tomographic Measures of Pulmonary Vascular Morphology in Smokers and Their Clinical Implications

Raúl San José Estépar; Gregory L. Kinney; Jennifer L. Black-Shinn; Russell P. Bowler; Gordon L. Kindlmann; James C. Ross; Ron Kikinis; MeiLan K. Han; Carolyn E. Come; Alejandro A. Diaz; Michael H. Cho; Craig P. Hersh; Joyce Schroeder; John J. Reilly; David A. Lynch; James D. Crapo; J. Michael Wells; Mark T. Dransfield; John E. Hokanson; George R. Washko

RATIONALE Angiographic investigation suggests that pulmonary vascular remodeling in smokers is characterized by distal pruning of the blood vessels. OBJECTIVES Using volumetric computed tomography scans of the chest we sought to quantitatively evaluate this process and assess its clinical associations. METHODS Pulmonary vessels were automatically identified, segmented, and measured. Total blood vessel volume (TBV) and the aggregate vessel volume for vessels less than 5 mm(2) (BV5) were calculated for all lobes. The lobe-specific BV5 measures were normalized to the TBV of that lobe and the nonvascular tissue volume (BV5/T(issue)V) to calculate lobe-specific BV5/TBV and BV5/T(issue)V ratios. Densitometric measures of emphysema were obtained using a Hounsfield unit threshold of -950 (%LAA-950). Measures of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease severity included single breath measures of diffusing capacity of carbon monoxide, oxygen saturation, the 6-minute-walk distance, St Georges Respiratory Questionnaire total score (SGRQ), and the body mass index, airflow obstruction, dyspnea, and exercise capacity (BODE) index. MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS The %LAA-950 was inversely related to all calculated vascular ratios. In multivariate models including age, sex, and %LAA-950, lobe-specific measurements of BV5/TBV were directly related to resting oxygen saturation and inversely associated with both the SGRQ and BODE scores. In similar multivariate adjustment lobe-specific BV5/T(issue)V ratios were inversely related to resting oxygen saturation, diffusing capacity of carbon monoxide, 6-minute-walk distance, and directly related to the SGRQ and BODE. CONCLUSIONS Smoking-related chronic obstructive pulmonary disease is characterized by distal pruning of the small blood vessels (<5 mm(2)) and loss of tissue in excess of the vasculature. The magnitude of these changes predicts the clinical severity of disease.


Radiology | 2013

Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease: Lobe-based Visual Assessment of Volumetric CT by Using Standard Images—Comparison with Quantitative CT and Pulmonary Function Test in the COPDGene Study

Song Soo Kim; Joon Beom Seo; Ho Yun Lee; Dipti Nevrekar; Anna V. Forssen; James D. Crapo; Joyce Schroeder; David A. Lynch

PURPOSE To provide a new detailed visual assessment scheme of computed tomography (CT) for chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) by using standard reference images and to compare this visual assessment method with quantitative CT and several physiologic parameters. MATERIALS AND METHODS This research was approved by the institutional review board of each institution. CT images of 200 participants in the COPDGene study were evaluated. Four thoracic radiologists performed independent, lobar analysis of volumetric CT images for type (centrilobular, panlobular, and mixed) and extent (on a six-point scale) of emphysema, the presence of bronchiectasis, airway wall thickening, and tracheal abnormalities. Standard images for each finding, generated by two radiologists, were used for reference. The extent of emphysema, airway wall thickening, and luminal area were quantified at the lobar level by using commercial software. Spearman rank test and simple and multiple regression analyses were performed to compare the results of visual assessment with physiologic and quantitative parameters. RESULTS The type of emphysema, determined by four readers, showed good agreement (κ = 0.63). The extent of the emphysema in each lobe showed good agreement (mean weighted κ = 0.70) and correlated with findings at quantitative CT (r = 0.75), forced expiratory volume in 1 second (FEV(1)) (r = -0.68), FEV(1)/forced vital capacity (FVC) ratio (r = -0.74) (P < .001). Agreement for airway wall thickening was fair (mean κ = 0.41), and the number of lobes with thickened bronchial walls correlated with FEV(1) (r = -0.60) and FEV(1)/FVC ratio (r = -0.60) (P < .001). CONCLUSION Visual assessment of emphysema and airways disease in individuals with COPD can provide reproducible, physiologically substantial information that may complement that provided by quantitative CT assessment.


Journal of Applied Physiology | 2014

Computed tomographic measures of airway morphology in smokers and never-smoking normals

George R. Washko; Alejandro A. Diaz; Victor Kim; R. G. Barr; Mark T. Dransfield; Joyce Schroeder; John J. Reilly; Joe W. Ramsdell; A. McKenzie; E.J.R. van Beek; David A. Lynch; James P. Butler; MeiLan K. Han

Bronchial wall area percent (WA% = 100 × wall area/total bronchial cross sectional area) is a standard computed tomographic (CT) measure of central airway morphology utilized in smokers with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). Although it provides significant clinical correlations, the range of reported WA% is narrow. This suggests limited macroscopic change in response to smoking or that remodeling proportionally affects the airway wall and lumen dimensions such that their ratio is preserved. The objective of this study is to assess central airway wall area (WA), lumen area (Ai), and total bronchial area (Ao) from CT scans of 5,179 smokers and 92 never smoking normal subjects. In smokers, WA, Ai, and Ao were positively correlated with forced expiratory volume in 1 s (FEV1) expressed as a percent of predicted (FEV1%), and the WA% was negatively correlated with FEV1% (P < 0.0001 for all comparisons). Importantly, smokers with lower FEV1% tended to have airways of smaller cross-sectional area with lower WA. The increases in the WA% across GOLD stages of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) can therefore not be due to increases in WA. The data suggest two possible origins for the WA% increases: 1) central airway remodeling resulting in overall reductions in airway caliber in excess of the decreased WA or 2) those with COPD had smaller native airways before they began smoking. In both cases, these observations provide an explanation for the limited range of values of WA% across stages of COPD.


Chest | 2013

Effect of Emphysema on CT Scan Measures of Airway Dimensions in Smokers

Alejandro A. Diaz; MeiLan K. Han; Carolyn E. Come; Raúl San José Estépar; James C. Ross; Victor Kim; Mark T. Dransfield; Douglas Curran-Everett; Joyce Schroeder; David A. Lynch; Juerg Tschirren; Edwin K. Silverman; George R. Washko

BACKGROUND In CT scans of smokers with COPD, the subsegmental airway wall area percent (WA%) is greater and more strongly correlated with FEV1 % predicted than WA% obtained in the segmental airways. Because emphysema is linked to loss of airway tethering and may limit airway expansion, increases in WA% may be related to emphysema and not solely to remodeling. We aimed to first determine whether the stronger association of subsegmental vs segmental WA% with FEV1 % predicted is mitigated by emphysema and, second, to assess the relationships among emphysema, WA%, and total bronchial area (TBA). METHODS We analyzed CT scan segmental and subsegmental WA% (WA% = 100 × wall area/TBA) of six bronchial paths and corresponding lobar emphysema, lung function, and clinical data in 983 smokers with COPD. RESULTS Compared with segmental WA%, the subsegmental WA% had a greater effect on FEV1% predicted (-0.8% to -1.7% vs -1.9% to -2.6% per 1-unit increase in WA%, respectively; P < .05 for most bronchial paths). After adjusting for emphysema, the association between subsegmental WA% and FEV1 % predicted was weakened in two bronchial paths. Increases in WA% between bronchial segments correlated directly with emphysema in all bronchial paths (P < .05). In multivariate regression models, emphysema was directly related to subsegmental WA% in most bronchial paths and inversely related to subsegmental TBA in all bronchial paths. CONCLUSION The greater effect of subsegmental WA% on airflow obstruction is mitigated by emphysema. Part of the emphysema effect might be due to loss of airway tethering, leading to a reduction in TBA and an increase in WA%.


COPD: Journal of Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease | 2011

Gender Differences of Airway Dimensions in Anatomically Matched Sites on CT in Smokers

Yu-Il Kim; Joyce Schroeder; David A. Lynch; Barry J. Make; Adam L. Friedlander; Raúl San José Estépar; Nicola A. Hanania; George R. Washko; James Murphy; Carla Wilson; John E. Hokanson; Jordan A. Zach; Kiel Butterfield; Russell P. Bowler; COPDGene Investigators

Rationale and Objectives: There are limited data on, and controversies regarding gender differences in the airway dimensions of smokers. Multi-detector CT (MDCT) images were analyzed to examine whether gender could explain differences in airway dimensions of anatomically matched airways in smokers. Materials and Methods: We used VIDA imaging software to analyze MDCT scans from 2047 smokers (M:F, 1021:1026) from the COPDGene® cohort. The airway dimensions were analyzed from segmental to subsubsegmental bronchi. We compared the differences of luminal area, inner diameter, wall thickness, wall area percentage (WA%) for each airway between men and women, and multiple linear regression including covariates (age, gender, body sizes, and other relevant confounding factors) was used to determine the predictors of each airway dimensions. Results: Lumen area, internal diameter and wall thickness were smaller for women than men in all measured airway (18.4 vs 22.5 mm2 for segmental bronchial lumen area, 10.4 vs 12.5 mm2 for subsegmental bronchi, 6.5 vs 7.7 mm2 for subsubsegmental bronchi, respectively p < 0.001). However, women had greater WA% in subsegmental and subsubsegmental bronchi. In multivariate regression, gender remained one of the most significant predictors of WA%, lumen area, inner diameter and wall thickness. Conclusion: Women smokers have higher WA%, but lower luminal area, internal diameter and airway thickness in anatomically matched airways as measured by CT scan than do male smokers. This difference may explain, in part, gender differences in the prevalence of COPD and airflow limitation.


European Journal of Radiology | 2016

Quantitative computed tomography measurements to evaluate airway disease in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease: Relationship to physiological measurements, clinical index and visual assessment of airway disease

Atsushi Nambu; Jordan A. Zach; Joyce Schroeder; Gongyoung Jin; Song Soo Kim; Yu-Il Kim; Christina Schnell; Russell P. Bowler; David A. Lynch

PURPOSE To correlate currently available quantitative CT measurements for airway disease with physiological indices and the body-mass index, airflow obstruction, dyspnea, and exercise capacity (BODE) index in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). MATERIALS AND METHODS This study was approved by our institutional review board (IRB number 2778). Written informed consent was obtained from all subjects. The subjects included 188 current and former cigarette smokers from the COPDGene cohort who underwent inspiratory and expiratory CT and also had physiological measurements for the evaluation of airflow limitation, including FEF25-75%, airway resistance (Raw), and specific airway conductance (sGaw). The BODE index was used as the index of clinical symptoms. Quantitative CT measures included % low attenuation areas [% voxels≤950 Hounsfield unit (HU) on inspiratory CT, %LAA-950ins], percent gas trapping (% voxels≤-856HU on expiratory CT, %LAA -856exp), relative inspiratory to expiratory volume change of voxels with attenuation values from -856 to -950HU [Relative Volume Change (RVC)-856 to -950], expiratory to inspiratory ratio of mean lung density (E/I-ratio MLD), Pi10, and airway wall thickness (WT), luminal diameter (LD) and airway wall area percent (WA%) in the segmental, subsegmental and subsubsegmental bronchi on inspiratory CT. Correlation coefficients were calculated between the QCT measurements and physiological measurements in all subjects and in the subjects with mild emphysema (%LAA-950ins <10%). Univariate and multiple variable analysis for the BODE index were also performed. Adjustments were made for age, gender, smoking pack years, FEF25-75%, Raw, and sGaw. RESULTS Quantitative CT measurements had significant correlations with physiological indices. Among them, E/I-ratio MLD had the strongest correlations with FEF25-75% (r=-0.648, <0.001) and sGaw (r=-0.624, <0.001) while in the subjects with mild emphysema subsegmental WA% and segmental WA% had the strongest correlation with FEF25-75% (r=-0.669, <0.001) and sGaw (r=-0.638, <0.001), respectively. The multiple variable analyses showed that RVC-856 to -950 was an independent predictor of the BODE index showing the highest R2 (0.468) as an independent variable among the QCT measurements. CONCLUSION Quantitative CT measurements of gas trapping such as E/I-ratio MLD, correlate better with physiological indices for airway disease than those of airway such as WA% or LD. In mild emphysema, however, quantitative CT measurements of airway correlate better with the physiological indices. RVC-856 to -950 is a predictor of the BODE index.


Respirology | 2014

Cystatin C: A potential biomarker for pulmonary arterial hypertension

Brett Fenster; Luis Lasalvia; Joyce Schroeder; Jamey Smyser; Lori J. Silveira; J. Kern Buckner; Kevin K. Brown

Cystatin C (CysC), a novel marker of renal function, predicts left heart failure and cardiovascular mortality. The hypothesis that serum CysC levels correlate with right ventricular (RV) morphology, function and pressure in pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) was tested.


European Journal of Radiology | 2015

Relationships between diffusing capacity for carbon monoxide (DLCO), and quantitative computed tomography measurements and visual assessment for chronic obstructive pulmonary disease

Atsushi Nambu; Jordan A. Zach; Joyce Schroeder; Gong Yong Jin; Song Soo Kim; Yu-Il Kim; Christina Schnell; Russell P. Bowler; David A. Lynch

PURPOSE To evaluate the relationships between DLCO, and Quantitative CT (QCT) measurements and visual assessment of pulmonary emphysema and to test the relative roles of visual and quantitative assessment of emphysema. MATERIALS AND METHODS The subjects included 199 current and former cigarette smokers from the COPDGene cohort who underwent inspiratory and expiratory CT and also had diffusing capacity for carbon monoxide corrected for alveolar volume (DLCO/VA). Quantitative CT measurements included % low attenuation areas (%LAA-950ins=voxels ≤-950 Hounsfield unit (HU), %LAA-910ins, and %LAA-856ins), mean CT attenuation and 15th percentile HU value on inspiratory CT, and %LAA-856exp (voxels ≤-856 HU on expiratory CT). The extent of emphysema was visually assessed using a 5-point grading system. Univariate and multiple variable linear regression analyses were employed to evaluate the correlations between DLCO/VA and QCT parameters and visual extent of emphysema. RESULTS The DLCO/VA correlated most strongly with 15th percentile HU (R(2)=0.440, p<0.001) closely followed by %LAA-950ins (R(2)=0.417, p<0.001) and visual extent of emphysema (R(2)=0.411, p<0.001). Multiple variable analysis showed that visual extent of emphysema and 15th percentile HU were independent significant predictors of DLCO/VA at an R(2) of 0.599. CONCLUSIONS 15th percentile HU seems the best parameter to represent the respiratory condition of COPD. Visual and Quantitative CT assessment of emphysema provide complementary information to QCT analysis.

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Brett Fenster

University of Colorado Denver

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David A. Lynch

University of California

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Jean Hertzberg

University of Colorado Boulder

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J. Kern Buckner

University of Colorado Denver

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Edwin K. Silverman

Brigham and Women's Hospital

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Jordan A. Zach

University of Colorado Denver

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George R. Washko

Brigham and Women's Hospital

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