TY - JOUR
T1 - The Role of Chest Imaging in Patient Management During the COVID-19 Pandemic
T2 - A Multinational Consensus Statement From the Fleischner Society
AU - Rubin, Geoffrey D.
AU - Ryerson, Christopher J.
AU - Haramati, Linda B.
AU - Sverzellati, Nicola
AU - Kanne, Jeffrey P.
AU - Raoof, Suhail
AU - Schluger, Neil W.
AU - Volpi, Annalisa
AU - Yim, Jae Joon
AU - Martin, Ian B.K.
AU - Anderson, Deverick J.
AU - Kong, Christina
AU - Altes, Talissa
AU - Bush, Andrew
AU - Desai, Sujal R.
AU - Goldin, Jonathan
AU - Goo, Jin Mo
AU - Humbert, Marc
AU - Inoue, Yoshikazu
AU - Kauczor, Hans Ulrich
AU - Luo, Fengming
AU - Mazzone, Peter J.
AU - Prokop, Mathias
AU - Remy-Jardin, Martine
AU - Richeldi, Luca
AU - Schaefer-Prokop, Cornelia M.
AU - Tomiyama, Noriyuki
AU - Wells, Athol U.
AU - Leung, Ann N.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2020 American College of Chest Physicians, published by Elsevier Inc; RSNA
PY - 2020/7
Y1 - 2020/7
N2 - With more than 900,000 confirmed cases worldwide and nearly 50,000 deaths during the first 3 months of 2020, the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic has emerged as an unprecedented health care crisis. The spread of COVID-19 has been heterogeneous, resulting in some regions having sporadic transmission and relatively few hospitalized patients with COVID-19 and others having community transmission that has led to overwhelming numbers of severe cases. For these regions, health care delivery has been disrupted and compromised by critical resource constraints in diagnostic testing, hospital beds, ventilators, and health care workers who have fallen ill to the virus exacerbated by shortages of personal protective equipment. Although mild cases mimic common upper respiratory viral infections, respiratory dysfunction becomes the principal source of morbidity and mortality as the disease advances. Thoracic imaging with chest radiography and CT are key tools for pulmonary disease diagnosis and management, but their role in the management of COVID-19 has not been considered within the multivariable context of the severity of respiratory disease, pretest probability, risk factors for disease progression, and critical resource constraints. To address this deficit, a multidisciplinary panel comprised principally of radiologists and pulmonologists from 10 countries with experience managing patients with COVID-19 across a spectrum of health care environments evaluated the utility of imaging within three scenarios representing varying risk factors, community conditions, and resource constraints. Fourteen key questions, corresponding to 11 decision points within the three scenarios and three additional clinical situations, were rated by the panel based on the anticipated value of the information that thoracic imaging would be expected to provide. The results were aggregated, resulting in five main and three additional recommendations intended to guide medical practitioners in the use of chest radiography and CT in the management of COVID-19.
AB - With more than 900,000 confirmed cases worldwide and nearly 50,000 deaths during the first 3 months of 2020, the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic has emerged as an unprecedented health care crisis. The spread of COVID-19 has been heterogeneous, resulting in some regions having sporadic transmission and relatively few hospitalized patients with COVID-19 and others having community transmission that has led to overwhelming numbers of severe cases. For these regions, health care delivery has been disrupted and compromised by critical resource constraints in diagnostic testing, hospital beds, ventilators, and health care workers who have fallen ill to the virus exacerbated by shortages of personal protective equipment. Although mild cases mimic common upper respiratory viral infections, respiratory dysfunction becomes the principal source of morbidity and mortality as the disease advances. Thoracic imaging with chest radiography and CT are key tools for pulmonary disease diagnosis and management, but their role in the management of COVID-19 has not been considered within the multivariable context of the severity of respiratory disease, pretest probability, risk factors for disease progression, and critical resource constraints. To address this deficit, a multidisciplinary panel comprised principally of radiologists and pulmonologists from 10 countries with experience managing patients with COVID-19 across a spectrum of health care environments evaluated the utility of imaging within three scenarios representing varying risk factors, community conditions, and resource constraints. Fourteen key questions, corresponding to 11 decision points within the three scenarios and three additional clinical situations, were rated by the panel based on the anticipated value of the information that thoracic imaging would be expected to provide. The results were aggregated, resulting in five main and three additional recommendations intended to guide medical practitioners in the use of chest radiography and CT in the management of COVID-19.
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U2 - 10.1016/j.chest.2020.04.003
DO - 10.1016/j.chest.2020.04.003
M3 - Article
C2 - 32275978
AN - SCOPUS:85084802588
SN - 0012-3692
VL - 158
SP - 106
EP - 116
JO - CHEST
JF - CHEST
IS - 1
ER -