| Literature DB >> 32624074 |
Xinglong Feng1, Xuemei Ding2, Fuzhou Zhang2.
Abstract
Chest CT evaluation is often vital to determine patients suspected of COVID-19 pneumonia. The aim of this study was to determine the evolution of lung abnormalities evaluated by quantitative CT techniques in patients with COVID-19 infection from initial diagnosis to recovery. This retrospective study included 16 patients with COVID-19 infection from 30 January 2020 through 11 March 2020. Repeat chest CT examinations were obtained for three or more scans per patient. We measured total volume and mean CT value of lung lesions in each patient per scan, and then calculated the mass, which equals to volume × (CT value + 1000). Dynamic evolution of chest CT imaging as a function of time was fitted by non-linear regression model in terms of mass, volume and CT value, respectively. According to the fitting curves, we redefined the evolution of lung abnormalities: progressive stage (0-5 days), infection emerged and rapidly aggravated; peak stage (5-15 days), the greatest severity at approximate 7-8 days after onset; and absorption stage (15-30 days), the lesions slowly and gradually resolved.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; Computed tomography; lung; novel coronavirus pneumonia
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32624074 PMCID: PMC7360949 DOI: 10.1017/S0950268820001508
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Epidemiol Infect ISSN: 0950-2688 Impact factor: 2.451
Characteristics of the included patients with COVID-19 pneumonia
| Characteristics | |
|---|---|
| Age (years) | 43.6 ± 15.5 (10–67) |
| Gender (male:female) | 9:7 |
| Initial symptoms | |
| Fever | 5 (31.3%) |
| Cough | 6 (37.5%) |
| Diarrhoea | 4 (25%) |
| Myalgia | 3 (18.8%) |
| Symptomless | 4 (25%) |
| Laboratory examinations | |
| White blood cell count (G/L) | 5.9 ± 2.0 (2.6–9.1) |
| Lymphocyte percentage (%) | 20.4 ± 12.3 (0.2–46.3) |
| C-reactive protein (mg/l) | 19.7 ± 25.6 (0.5–94.6) |
| Calcitonin (ng/ml) | 0.07 ± 0.05 (0.02–0.25) |
| Chest CT findings | |
| Bilateral | 12 (75%) |
| Multifocal | 14 (87.5%) |
| Subpleural | 15 (93.8%) |
| Ground-glass opacity | 12 (75%) |
| | |
Fig. 1.Inter-observer agreement by Bland−Altman plots. The mean of measurement differences for mass is 13.1% ± 7.0% with 95% limits of agreement from −0.6% to 26.8%. The ratio of standard deviation to mean of measurement differences is used to avoid excessive differences in absolute values. The positive measurement differences indicate one observer tends to measure the lung abnormalities more than the other.
Fig. 2.The fitting curves for lung abnormalities evaluated by quantitative CT techniques as a function of time. The evolution of chest CT imaging is defined as progressive stage (0–5 days), peak stage (5–15 days) and absorption stage (15–30 days) by multiple CT quantitative techniques, including mass (y = −0.00002×4 + 0.0019×3 − 0.0519×2 + 0.4889x − 0.9626, R2 = 0.2283), volume (y = −0.00002×4 + 0.0017×3 − 0.0441×2 + 0.429x − 0.9479, R2 = 0.1878) and CT value (y = −0.0068×4 + 0.5043×3 − 11.976×2 + 80.978x − 400.18, R2 = 0.7143).