COVID-19 clinico-radiological mismatch: a proposal for a novel combined morphologic/volumetric CT severity score with blinded validation

Abstract Background Some COVID-19 patients with similar quantitative CT measurements had variable clinical presentation and outcome. The absence of reasonable clinical explanations, such as pre-existing comorbidities or vascular complications, adds to the confusion. The authors believed that neglect...

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Main Authors: Ahmed Samir, Abdelaziz Elnekeidy, Heba Said Gharraf, Ayman Ibrahim Baess, Tarek El-Diasty, Dina Altarawy
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SpringerOpen 2021-04-01
Series:The Egyptian Journal of Radiology and Nuclear Medicine
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s43055-021-00486-1
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spelling doaj-a7caccd9c50a43bfadbf900cdcf0d7972021-04-18T11:43:01ZengSpringerOpenThe Egyptian Journal of Radiology and Nuclear Medicine2090-47622021-04-0152111710.1186/s43055-021-00486-1COVID-19 clinico-radiological mismatch: a proposal for a novel combined morphologic/volumetric CT severity score with blinded validationAhmed Samir0Abdelaziz Elnekeidy1Heba Said Gharraf2Ayman Ibrahim Baess3Tarek El-Diasty4Dina Altarawy5Department of Radio-diagnosis, Faculty of Medicine, Alexandria UniversityDepartment of Radio-diagnosis, Faculty of Medicine, Alexandria UniversityDepartment of Chest Diseases, Faculty of Medicine, Alexandria UniversityDepartment of Chest Diseases, Faculty of Medicine, Alexandria UniversityDepartment of Radiology, Urology and Nephrology Center, Mansoura UniversityDepartment of Radio-diagnosis, Faculty of Medicine, Alexandria UniversityAbstract Background Some COVID-19 patients with similar quantitative CT measurements had variable clinical presentation and outcome. The absence of reasonable clinical explanations, such as pre-existing comorbidities or vascular complications, adds to the confusion. The authors believed that neglecting the impact of certain severe morphologic features could be an alternative radiological explanation. This study aims to optimize the initial CT staging of COVID-19 and propose a new combined morphologic/volumetric CT severity index (CTSI) to solve this clinico-radiological mismatch. Results This multi-center study included two major steps. The first step of the study entailed a standardized combined morphologic/volumetric CT severity analyses to propose a new optimized CTSI. This was conducted retrospectively during the period from June till September 2020. It included 379 acutely symptomatic COVID-19 patients. They were clinically classified according to their oxygen saturation and respiratory therapeutic requirements into three groups: group A (mild 298/79%), group B (borderline severity 57/15%), and group C (severe/critical 24/6%). The morphologic and volumetric assessment of their HRCT was analyzed according to severity, by two consultant radiologists in consensus. A new 25 point-CTSI has been created, combining eight morphological CT patterns [M1:M8; 8 points] and four grades of volumetric scores [S1:S4; 17 points]. The addition of the M5 pattern (air bubble sign), M6 pattern (early fibrosis and architectural distortion), or M7 pattern (crazy-paving) proved to increase the clinical severity. The second step of the study entailed a standardized blinded/independent validation analysis for the proposed CTSI. This was prospectively conducted on other 132 patients during October 2020 and independently performed by other two consultant radiologists. Validation results reached 80.2% sensitivity, 91.8% specificity, AUROC-curve = 0.8356, and 90.9% accuracy. Conclusion A new optimized CTSI with accepted validation is proposed for initial staging of COVID-19 patients, using combined morphologic/volumetric assessment instead of the quantitative assessment alone. It could solve the clinico-radiological mismatch among patients with similar quantitative CT results and variable clinical presentation during the absence of pre-existing comorbidities or vascular complications.https://doi.org/10.1186/s43055-021-00486-1COVID-19CTSIMorphologicVolumetricQuantitative
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ahmed Samir
Abdelaziz Elnekeidy
Heba Said Gharraf
Ayman Ibrahim Baess
Tarek El-Diasty
Dina Altarawy
spellingShingle Ahmed Samir
Abdelaziz Elnekeidy
Heba Said Gharraf
Ayman Ibrahim Baess
Tarek El-Diasty
Dina Altarawy
COVID-19 clinico-radiological mismatch: a proposal for a novel combined morphologic/volumetric CT severity score with blinded validation
The Egyptian Journal of Radiology and Nuclear Medicine
COVID-19
CTSI
Morphologic
Volumetric
Quantitative
author_facet Ahmed Samir
Abdelaziz Elnekeidy
Heba Said Gharraf
Ayman Ibrahim Baess
Tarek El-Diasty
Dina Altarawy
author_sort Ahmed Samir
title COVID-19 clinico-radiological mismatch: a proposal for a novel combined morphologic/volumetric CT severity score with blinded validation
title_short COVID-19 clinico-radiological mismatch: a proposal for a novel combined morphologic/volumetric CT severity score with blinded validation
title_full COVID-19 clinico-radiological mismatch: a proposal for a novel combined morphologic/volumetric CT severity score with blinded validation
title_fullStr COVID-19 clinico-radiological mismatch: a proposal for a novel combined morphologic/volumetric CT severity score with blinded validation
title_full_unstemmed COVID-19 clinico-radiological mismatch: a proposal for a novel combined morphologic/volumetric CT severity score with blinded validation
title_sort covid-19 clinico-radiological mismatch: a proposal for a novel combined morphologic/volumetric ct severity score with blinded validation
publisher SpringerOpen
series The Egyptian Journal of Radiology and Nuclear Medicine
issn 2090-4762
publishDate 2021-04-01
description Abstract Background Some COVID-19 patients with similar quantitative CT measurements had variable clinical presentation and outcome. The absence of reasonable clinical explanations, such as pre-existing comorbidities or vascular complications, adds to the confusion. The authors believed that neglecting the impact of certain severe morphologic features could be an alternative radiological explanation. This study aims to optimize the initial CT staging of COVID-19 and propose a new combined morphologic/volumetric CT severity index (CTSI) to solve this clinico-radiological mismatch. Results This multi-center study included two major steps. The first step of the study entailed a standardized combined morphologic/volumetric CT severity analyses to propose a new optimized CTSI. This was conducted retrospectively during the period from June till September 2020. It included 379 acutely symptomatic COVID-19 patients. They were clinically classified according to their oxygen saturation and respiratory therapeutic requirements into three groups: group A (mild 298/79%), group B (borderline severity 57/15%), and group C (severe/critical 24/6%). The morphologic and volumetric assessment of their HRCT was analyzed according to severity, by two consultant radiologists in consensus. A new 25 point-CTSI has been created, combining eight morphological CT patterns [M1:M8; 8 points] and four grades of volumetric scores [S1:S4; 17 points]. The addition of the M5 pattern (air bubble sign), M6 pattern (early fibrosis and architectural distortion), or M7 pattern (crazy-paving) proved to increase the clinical severity. The second step of the study entailed a standardized blinded/independent validation analysis for the proposed CTSI. This was prospectively conducted on other 132 patients during October 2020 and independently performed by other two consultant radiologists. Validation results reached 80.2% sensitivity, 91.8% specificity, AUROC-curve = 0.8356, and 90.9% accuracy. Conclusion A new optimized CTSI with accepted validation is proposed for initial staging of COVID-19 patients, using combined morphologic/volumetric assessment instead of the quantitative assessment alone. It could solve the clinico-radiological mismatch among patients with similar quantitative CT results and variable clinical presentation during the absence of pre-existing comorbidities or vascular complications.
topic COVID-19
CTSI
Morphologic
Volumetric
Quantitative
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s43055-021-00486-1
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