Diagnostic value of lung ultrasound in COVID-19: systematic review and meta-analysis

BACKGROUND:Effective and safe tools assisting triage decisions for COVID-19 patients could optimize the pressure on the healthcare system. COVID-19 often has respiratory manifestations, and medical imaging techniques provide an opportunity to assess the diseases severity. AIMS:To estimate the sen...

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Main Authors: Natalia N. Vetsheva, Roman V. Reshetnikov, Denis V. Leonov, Nikolas S. Kulberg, Olesya A. Mokienko
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Eco-Vector 2020-12-01
Series:Digital Diagnostics
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.eco-vector.com/DD/article/viewFile/46834/pdf
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spelling doaj-46fe49514bf14b3b82e545bf952257932021-07-08T04:20:13ZengEco-VectorDigital Diagnostics2712-84902712-89622020-12-0111132610.17816/DD4683442428Diagnostic value of lung ultrasound in COVID-19: systematic review and meta-analysisNatalia N. Vetsheva0https://orcid.org/0000-0002-9017-9432Roman V. Reshetnikov1https://orcid.org/0000-0002-9661-0254Denis V. Leonov2https://orcid.org/0000-0003-0916-6552Nikolas S. Kulberg3https://orcid.org/0000-0001-7046-7157Olesya A. Mokienko4https://orcid.org/0000-0002-7826-5135Research and Practical Clinical Center for Diagnostics and Telemedicine Technologies of the Moscow Health Care DepartmentResearch and Practical Clinical Center for Diagnostics and Telemedicine Technologies of the Moscow Health Care DepartmentResearch and Practical Clinical Center for Diagnostics and Telemedicine Technologies of the Moscow Health Care DepartmentResearch and Practical Clinical Center for Diagnostics and Telemedicine Technologies of the Moscow Health Care DepartmentResearch and Practical Clinical Center for Diagnostics and Telemedicine Technologies of the Moscow Health Care DepartmentBACKGROUND:Effective and safe tools assisting triage decisions for COVID-19 patients could optimize the pressure on the healthcare system. COVID-19 often has respiratory manifestations, and medical imaging techniques provide an opportunity to assess the diseases severity. AIMS:To estimate the sensitivity and specificity of lung ultrasound for different degrees of pulmonary involvement in COVID-19 patients by a systematic review of English articles using PubMed and Google Scholar databases. Search terms included lung ultrasound, chest ultrasound, thoracic ultrasound, ultrasonography, COVID-19, SARS-CoV-2, coronavirus, diagnosis, diagnostic value, specificity, and sensitivity. Only studies addressing lung ultrasound diagnostic accuracy for patients with suspected COVID-19 using thoracic computed tomography, reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction, or laboratory data as a reference standard were included. Independent extraction of articles was performed by two authors using predefined data fields with subsequent assessment of study quality indicators. The random-effect model was used to analyze and pool lung ultrasound sensitivity and specificity across the included studies. Sixteen studies met our inclusion criteria, but only three of them divided patients into distinct and defined groups depending on the disease severity. We used the remaining studies data to assess the secondary outcomes: the values of sensitivity and specificity of lung ultrasound for COVID-19 regardless of the patients clinical status. Heterogeneity for primary and secondary outcomes was observed that remained when pooling for different scenarios (screening, assessing severity) and cohorts of participants. Lung ultrasound had the highest accuracy for confirmed COVID-19 patients with severe disease (sensitivity 87.6% 12.3%, specificity 80.5% 7.1%), and the lowest accuracy for the patients with mild disease (sensitivity 72.8% 7.1%, specificity 74.3% 2.7%). CONCLUSIONS:Lung ultrasound can be used in patients with confirmed COVID-19 to detect serious damage to the lung tissue. The diagnostic value of the method for assessing mild and moderate lung lesions is relatively low.https://journals.eco-vector.com/DD/article/viewFile/46834/pdfcovid-19lung ultrasoundseverity grade estimatediagnostic valuesensitivityspecificity
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Natalia N. Vetsheva
Roman V. Reshetnikov
Denis V. Leonov
Nikolas S. Kulberg
Olesya A. Mokienko
spellingShingle Natalia N. Vetsheva
Roman V. Reshetnikov
Denis V. Leonov
Nikolas S. Kulberg
Olesya A. Mokienko
Diagnostic value of lung ultrasound in COVID-19: systematic review and meta-analysis
Digital Diagnostics
covid-19
lung ultrasound
severity grade estimate
diagnostic value
sensitivity
specificity
author_facet Natalia N. Vetsheva
Roman V. Reshetnikov
Denis V. Leonov
Nikolas S. Kulberg
Olesya A. Mokienko
author_sort Natalia N. Vetsheva
title Diagnostic value of lung ultrasound in COVID-19: systematic review and meta-analysis
title_short Diagnostic value of lung ultrasound in COVID-19: systematic review and meta-analysis
title_full Diagnostic value of lung ultrasound in COVID-19: systematic review and meta-analysis
title_fullStr Diagnostic value of lung ultrasound in COVID-19: systematic review and meta-analysis
title_full_unstemmed Diagnostic value of lung ultrasound in COVID-19: systematic review and meta-analysis
title_sort diagnostic value of lung ultrasound in covid-19: systematic review and meta-analysis
publisher Eco-Vector
series Digital Diagnostics
issn 2712-8490
2712-8962
publishDate 2020-12-01
description BACKGROUND:Effective and safe tools assisting triage decisions for COVID-19 patients could optimize the pressure on the healthcare system. COVID-19 often has respiratory manifestations, and medical imaging techniques provide an opportunity to assess the diseases severity. AIMS:To estimate the sensitivity and specificity of lung ultrasound for different degrees of pulmonary involvement in COVID-19 patients by a systematic review of English articles using PubMed and Google Scholar databases. Search terms included lung ultrasound, chest ultrasound, thoracic ultrasound, ultrasonography, COVID-19, SARS-CoV-2, coronavirus, diagnosis, diagnostic value, specificity, and sensitivity. Only studies addressing lung ultrasound diagnostic accuracy for patients with suspected COVID-19 using thoracic computed tomography, reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction, or laboratory data as a reference standard were included. Independent extraction of articles was performed by two authors using predefined data fields with subsequent assessment of study quality indicators. The random-effect model was used to analyze and pool lung ultrasound sensitivity and specificity across the included studies. Sixteen studies met our inclusion criteria, but only three of them divided patients into distinct and defined groups depending on the disease severity. We used the remaining studies data to assess the secondary outcomes: the values of sensitivity and specificity of lung ultrasound for COVID-19 regardless of the patients clinical status. Heterogeneity for primary and secondary outcomes was observed that remained when pooling for different scenarios (screening, assessing severity) and cohorts of participants. Lung ultrasound had the highest accuracy for confirmed COVID-19 patients with severe disease (sensitivity 87.6% 12.3%, specificity 80.5% 7.1%), and the lowest accuracy for the patients with mild disease (sensitivity 72.8% 7.1%, specificity 74.3% 2.7%). CONCLUSIONS:Lung ultrasound can be used in patients with confirmed COVID-19 to detect serious damage to the lung tissue. The diagnostic value of the method for assessing mild and moderate lung lesions is relatively low.
topic covid-19
lung ultrasound
severity grade estimate
diagnostic value
sensitivity
specificity
url https://journals.eco-vector.com/DD/article/viewFile/46834/pdf
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