Litcius/Paper detail

Diagnosing interstitial lung disease by multidisciplinary discussion: A review

Laura Glenn, Lauren Troy, Tamera J. Corte

2022Frontiers in Medicine47 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The multidisciplinary meeting (MDM) has been endorsed in current international consensus guidelines as the gold standard method for diagnosis of interstitial lung disease (ILD). In the absence of an accurate and reliable diagnostic test, the agreement between multidisciplinary meetings has been used as a surrogate marker for diagnostic accuracy. Although the ILD MDM has been shown to improve inter-clinician agreement on ILD diagnosis, result in a change in diagnosis in a significant proportion of patients and reduce unclassifiable diagnoses, the ideal form for an ILD MDM remains unclear, with constitution and processes of ILD MDMs varying greatly around the world. It is likely that this variation of practice contributes to the lack of agreement seen between MDMs, as well as suboptimal diagnostic accuracy. A recent Delphi study has confirmed the essential components required for the operation of an ILD MDM. The ILD MDM is a changing entity, as it incorporates new diagnostic tests and genetic markers, while also adapting in its form in response to the obstacles of the COVID-19 pandemic. The aim of this review was to evaluate the current evidence regarding ILD MDM and their role in the diagnosis of ILD, the practice of ILD MDM around the world, approaches to ILD MDM standardization and future directions to improve diagnostic accuracy in ILD.

Topics & Concepts

Interstitial lung diseaseMedicineGold standard (test)Medical diagnosisIntensive care medicineMultidisciplinary approachDiagnostic accuracyDelphi methodStandardizationClinical PracticeDiseaseDiagnostic testMedical physicsPathologyInternal medicineLungPhysical therapyPediatricsPolitical scienceComputer scienceLawArtificial intelligenceInterstitial Lung Diseases and Idiopathic Pulmonary FibrosisMedical Imaging and Pathology StudiesOccupational and environmental lung diseases