Temporal evolution of chest radiographic appearances in COVID-19 with clinicoradiological associations: a multicentre United Kingdom resident-led study
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Affiliation
Nottingham University Hospitals NHS Trust; The Royal London Hospital; New Cross Hospital Royal Wolverhampton NHS Trust; The Dudley Group NHS Foundation Trust.Publication date
2024-01-18Subject
Respiratory medicine
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To describe the (a) frequency of improving, static, and worsening chest radiograph (CXR) appearances; (b) differences in demographic, initial rudimentary haematological and CXR variables and these patterns; and (c) frequency of different trajectories of serial CXR evolution, in COVID-19 patients presenting consecutively. This multicentre retrospective study included all COVID-19 patients admitted from 1-30 April 2020, meeting the inclusion criteria across 24 (blinded) hospitals. Follow-up CXRs on admission, the subsequent (where available), and at 4-8 weeks were scored for the presence of parenchymal opacities across six zones. Three cohorts were defined: improved, static, and/or worsened. The chi-squared and Kruskal-Wallis tests were used to compare demographic, laboratory, and CXR variables. Trajectories of CXR evolution were assessed when all three CXRs were available (226 patients). Of 452 included patients (median age 66 years, interquartile range 54.3-79, 262 men), 211 (46.7%) improved, 140 (31%) were static, and 101 (22.3%) worsened. Improving patients were more likely younger, with a classic COVID-19 radiograph and higher initial CXR zonal severity scores (both p<0.001), while worsening patients had lower initial lymphocyte counts (p=0.008). The most frequent trajectory was worsened then improved (n=63, 27.9%) followed by static then improved (n=46, 20.4%) and static (n=42, 18.6%). Most patients with COVID-19 during the first wave of the pandemic demonstrated radiographic improvement; these patients were more likely younger with classic COVID-19 appearances and initially more extensive abnormality. Conversely, radiographic deterioration was associated with lower lymphocyte counts. The three most common trajectories were worsening then improvement, static then improvement, and static throughout.Citation
Gangi-Burton A, Chan N, Jassel I, Ashok AH, Nair A; RADIANT group. Temporal evolution of chest radiographic appearances in COVID-19 with clinicoradiological associations: a multicentre United Kingdom resident-led study. Clin Radiol. 2024 Apr;79(4):287-295. doi: 10.1016/j.crad.2023.11.001. Epub 2023 Nov 22. PMID: 38238147.PMID
38238147Publisher
Elsevierae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.1016/j.crad.2023.11.001