Frequency and Distribution of Chest Radiographic Findings in Patients Positive for COVID-19

2020 Radiology 1,501 citations

Abstract

Background Current coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) radiologic literature is dominated by CT, and a detailed description of chest radiography appearances in relation to the disease time course is lacking. Purpose To describe the time course and severity of findings of COVID-19 at chest radiography and correlate these with real-time reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) testing for severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2, or SARS-CoV-2, nucleic acid. Materials and Methods This is a retrospective study of patients with COVID-19 confirmed by using RT-PCR and chest radiographic examinations who were admitted across four hospitals and evaluated between January and March 2020. Baseline and serial chest radiographs (<i>n</i> = 255) were reviewed with RT-PCR. Correlation with concurrent CT examinations (<i>n</i> = 28) was performed when available. Two radiologists scored each chest radiograph in consensus for consolidation, ground-glass opacity, location, and pleural fluid. A severity index was determined for each lung. The lung scores were summed to produce the final severity score. Results The study was composed of 64 patients (26 men; mean age, 56 years ± 19 [standard deviation]). Of these, 58 patients had initial positive findings with RT-PCR (91%; 95% confidence interval: 81%, 96%), 44 patients had abnormal findings at baseline chest radiography (69%; 95% confidence interval: 56%, 80%), and 38 patients had initial positive findings with RT-PCR testing and abnormal findings at baseline chest radiography (59%; 95% confidence interval: 46%, 71%). Six patients (9%) showed abnormalities at chest radiography before eventually testing positive for COVID-19 with RT-PCR. Sensitivity of initial RT-PCR (91%; 95% confidence interval: 83%, 97%) was higher than that of baseline chest radiography (69%; 95% confidence interval: 56%, 80%) (<i>P</i> = .009). Radiographic recovery (mean, 6 days ± 5) and virologic recovery (mean, 8 days ± 6) were not significantly different (<i>P</i> = .33). Consolidation was the most common finding (30 of 64; 47%) followed by ground-glass opacities (21 of 64; 33%). Abnormalities at chest radiography had a peripheral distribution (26 of 64; 41%) and lower zone distribution (32 of 64; 50%) with bilateral involvement (32 of 64; 50%). Pleural effusion was uncommon (two of 64; 3%). The severity of findings at chest radiography peaked at 10-12 days from the date of symptom onset. Conclusion Findings at chest radiography in patients with coronavirus disease 2019 frequently showed bilateral lower zone consolidation, which peaked at 10-12 days from symptom onset. © RSNA, 2020.

Keywords

MedicineRadiographyConfidence intervalChest radiographRadiologyCoronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)Retrospective cohort studyInternal medicineNuclear medicineDiseaseInfectious disease (medical specialty)

MeSH Terms

AdolescentAdultAgedAged80 and overBetacoronavirusCOVID-19COVID-19 TestingCOVID-19 VaccinesClinical Laboratory TechniquesCoronavirus InfectionsFemaleHumansMaleMiddle AgedPandemicsPneumoniaViralRadiographic Image InterpretationComputer-AssistedReproducibility of ResultsRetrospective StudiesReverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain ReactionSARS-CoV-2Severity of Illness IndexTomographyX-Ray ComputedYoung Adult

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Publication Info

Year
2020
Type
article
Volume
296
Issue
2
Pages
E72-E78
Citations
1501
Access
Closed

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1501
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61
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941
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Cite This

Ho Yuen Frank Wong, Hiu Yin Sonia Lam, Ambrose Ho-Tung Fong et al. (2020). Frequency and Distribution of Chest Radiographic Findings in Patients Positive for COVID-19. Radiology , 296 (2) , E72-E78. https://doi.org/10.1148/radiol.2020201160

Identifiers

DOI
10.1148/radiol.2020201160
PMID
32216717
PMCID
PMC7233401

Data Quality

Data completeness: 86%