| Literature DB >> 35979154 |
Clarissa Martin1, Nina Cheng2, Bryant Chang2, Namrata Arya3, Michael Joseph Diaz4, Keldon Lin3, Muhammad Umair5, Joseph Waller2, Travis Henry6.
Abstract
Purpose: The global and ongoing COVID-19 outbreak has compelled the need for timely and reliable methods of detection for SARS-CoV-2 infection. Although reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) has been widely accepted as a reference standard for COVID-19 diagnosis, several early studies have suggested the superior sensitivity of computed tomography (CT) in identifying SARS-CoV-2 infection. In a previous systematic review, we stratified studies based on risk for bias to evaluate the true sensitivity of CT for detecting SARS-CoV-2 infection. This study revisits our prior analysis, incorporating more current data to assess the sensitivity of CT for COVID-19. Material and methods: The PubMed and Google Scholar databases were searched for relevant articles published between 1 January 2020, and 25 April 2021. Exclusion criteria included lack of specification regarding whether the study cohort was adult or paediatric, whether patients were symptomatic or asymptomatic, and not identifying the source of RT-PCR specimens. Ultimately, 62 studies were included for systematic review and were subsequently stratified by risk for bias using the QUADAS-2 quality assessment tool. Sensitivity data were extracted for random effects meta-analyses.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; CT; RT-PCR; SARS-CoV-2; sensitivity; systematic review
Year: 2022 PMID: 35979154 PMCID: PMC9373863 DOI: 10.5114/pjr.2022.118238
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pol J Radiol ISSN: 1733-134X
Figure 1Flow diagram of the study
Sensitivities of initial reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) for diagnosing COVID-19 infection in high-risk-of-bias studies
| Biased study | No. of patients | Positive result, | Study limitations |
|---|---|---|---|
| R. Liu | 4880 | 1854 (38) | Determined patients had COVID-19 based on typical symptoms or contact with COVID-19 |
| J. Wu | 80 | 41 (51) | Patient cohort was not COVID-19 confirmed |
| Y. Fang | 51 | 36 (71) | No asymptomatic patients (all patients had fever or acute respiratory symptoms) |
| C. Long | 36 | 30 (83) | No asymptomatic patients (only included patients with fever > 38°C and COVID-19 pneumonia suspicion) |
| A.T. Xiao | 70 | 55 (79) | These data were for 2 consecutive RT-PCR tests |
| T. Xu | 51 | 49 (96) | No asymptomatic patients |
| R. Sun | 35 | 24 (69) | Clinically positive cases were determined by symptoms and chest CT |
| B. Clerici | 393 | 300 (77) | Only clinically recovered patients |
| N. Hanif | 78 | 35 (45) | No asymptomatic patients |
| C. Thomas | 84 | 79 (94) | No asymptomatic patients |
| S. Schalekamp | 536 | 497 (93) | No asymptomatic patients |
| N. Sverzellati | 248 | 190 (77) | No asymptomatic patients |
| V.R. Bollineni | 51 | 36 (71) | Only patients with respiratory distress presenting to ED |
| D. Chen | 21 | 14 (67) | No asymptomatic patients |
| Z. Wen | 88 | 37 (42) | RT-PCR collected from different tissues |
The study limitations are aspects of the study’s methods that prevent generalizing the reported sensitivity to the broader SARS-CoV-2-infected population.
RT-PCR – real-time polymerase chain reaction, SARS-CoV-2 – severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus-2.
Sensitivities of Iinitial reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) for diagnosing COVID-19 infection in low-risk-of-bias studies
| Low-risk-of-bias study | No. of patients | Positive result, | Main topic of study |
|---|---|---|---|
| Y. Li et al. | 241 | 169 (70)* | RT-PCR testing of hospitalized SARS-CoV-2 patients |
| W. Wang | 127 | 91 (72) | Investigation of different types of RT-PCR specimens |
| A. Bernheim | 102 | 90 (88) | Serial chest CT findings of symptomatic COVID-19 patients |
| H.Y.F. Wong | 64 | 58 (91) | Correlation of chest CT findings with RT-PCR tests for COVID-19 patients |
| J.L. He | 34 | 27 (79) | Comparison of CT and initial RT-PCR in diagnosing COVID-19 |
| G. Herpe | 2564 | 2225 (87) | Efficacy of chest CT for COVID-19 |
| V. Ducray | 287 | 278 (97) | Chest CT for triage of COVID-19 patients |
RT-PCR – real-time polymerase chain reaction, SARS-CoV-2 – severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus-2
Although this study was originally classified as biased for assuming that patients with pneumonia have COVID-19, we were able to correct for this by only using the 241 patients who were eventually confirmed positive on RT-PCR in our calculation.
Figure 2Forest plot of reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) studies showing the sensitivity of each study using a random effects model to control for heterogeneity and showing subgroups by bias in the studies
Sensitivities of initial chest CT for diagnosing COVID-19 infection in high-risk-of-bias studies
| Biased study | No. of patients | Positive results, | Study limitations |
|---|---|---|---|
| D. Wang D | 30 | 14 (47) | No adult patients. |
| X. Lu | 170 | 111 (65) | No adult patients. |
| F. Zheng | 24 | 16 (67) | No adult patients. |
| Y. Wang | 55 | 37 (67) | All asymptomatic patients. |
| Z. Hu | 24 | 17 (71) | All asymptomatic patients. |
| W.J. Guan | 877 | 720 (82) | Only patients who were admitted to an ICU, used a ventilator, or died were included. |
| G. Huang | 30 | 26 (87) | Implied all patients were symptomatic (grouped by time of symptom onset). |
| Z. Chen | 98 | 91 (93) | No asymptomatic patients. |
| W. Zhu | 32 | 30 (94) | No asymptomatic patients. |
| K. Wang | 114 | 110 (96) | No asymptomatic patients. |
| T. Ai | 601 | 583 (97) | Used a cohort of patients with pneumonia. |
| D. Caruso | 62 | 60 (97) | No asymptomatic patients (only included patients with respiratory symptoms). |
| C. Long | 36 | 35 (97) | No asymptomatic patients (patients all had fever >38°C and COVID-19 pneumonia suspicion). |
| Y. Fang | 51 | 50 (98) | No asymptomatic patients (all patients had fever or acute respiratory symptoms). |
| J. Chen | 249 | 243 (98) | No asymptomatic patients. |
| X. Xu | 62 | 61 (98) | No asymptomatic patients (patients with nonspecific respiratory symptoms were included). |
| J.J. Zhang | 135 | 134 (99) | No asymptomatic patients. |
| T. Xu | 51 | 51 (100) | No asymptomatic patients. |
| Z. Zhou | 62 | 62 (100) | No asymptomatic patients. |
| X. Zhao | 80 | 80 (100) | No asymptomatic patients. |
| H. Shi | 81 | 81 (100) | No asymptomatic patients. |
| R. Han | 108 | 108 (100) | No asymptomatic patients (involved mild patients but they all have COVID-19 associated pneumonia). |
| D. Wang | 138 | 138 (100) | No asymptomatic patients. |
| C. Wu | 201 | 201 (100) | No asymptomatic patients. |
| Ravikanth R. | 481 | 470 (98) * | No asymptomatic patients *(calculation corrected) |
| H.A. Gietema | 83 | 74 (89) | No asymptomatic patients |
| R. Sun | 22 | 18 (82) | Clinically positive cases were determined by symptoms and chest CT |
| V.R. Bollineni | 144 | 144 (100) | Only patients with respiratory distress presenting to ED |
| A. Orlacchio | 344 | 313 (91) | No asymptomatic patients |
| N. Sverzellati | 190 | 156 (82) | No asymptomatic patients |
| S. Schalekamp | 536 | 493 (92) | No asymptomatic patients |
| C. Thomas | 80 | 70 (88) | No asymptomatic patients |
| N. Hanif | 38 | 35 (92) | No asymptomatic patients |
| Z. Wen | 88 | 82 (93) | No asymptomatic patients |
The study limitations are aspects of the study’s methods that prevent generalizing the reported sensitivity to the broader SARS-CoV-2-infected population.
CT – computed tomography, ICU – intensive care unit, SARS-CoV-2 – severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus-2
Sensitivities of initial chest CT for diagnosing COVID-19 infection in low-risk-of-bias studies
| Low-risk-of-bias study | No. of patients | Positive results, | Main topic of study |
|---|---|---|---|
| A. Bernheim | 36 | 16 (44) | Serial chest CT findings of symptomatic COVID-19 patients |
| H. Qiu | 36 | 19 (53) | Clinical presentation of paediatric COVID-19 patients |
| S. Inui | 104 | 63 (60) | CT findings of Diamond Princess COVID-19 patients |
| J. Wu | 80 | 55 (69) | CT and laboratory findings of imported COVID-19 patients |
| K. Li | 78 | 56 (72) | Comparison of CT imaging and COVID-19 clinical features |
| Y.H. Xu | 50 | 41 (82) | CT findings of COVID-19 patients |
| Z. Ling | 295 | 246 (83) | CT findings in asymptomatic SARS-CoV-2 patients |
| W. Yang | 149 | 132 (89) | CT imaging and clinical findings in COVID-19 patients |
| H.Y.F. Wong | 28 | 25 (89) | Correlation of chest CT findings with RT-PCR tests for COVID-19 patients |
| W. Zhao | 101 | 93 (92) | Correlation between COVID-19 CT imaging findings and clinical features |
| Z. Falaschi | 462 | 419 (91) | Chest CT performance in diagnosing COVID-19 |
| J.L. He | 34 | 26 (77) | Comparison of CT and initial RT-PCR in diagnosing COVID-19 |
| M.N.E. Kassem | 103 | 78 (76) | CT clinical findings in COVID-19 |
| J.J.R. Hermans | 133 | 120(90) | Comparison of chest CT with initial RT-PCR in COVID-19 |
| A. Mirahmadizadeh | 28 | 19 (68) | CT sensitivity and specificity for COVID-19 |
| G. Herpe | 2564 | 2319 (90) | Efficacy of chest CT for COVID-19 |
| V. Ducray | 287 | 259 (90) | Chest CT for triage of COVID-19 patients |
CT – computed tomography, SARS-CoV-2 – severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus-2
Figure 3Forest plot of computed tomography (CT) studies showing the sensitivity of each study using a random effects model to control for heterogeneity and showing subgroups by bias in the studies.