CT findings of COVID-19-associated pulmonary aspergillosis: a systematic review and individual patient data analysis

Common CT abnormalities of pulmonary aspergillosis represent a cavity with air-meniscus sign, nodule, mass, and consolidation having an angio-invasive pattern. This study aims to conduct a systematic review and an individual patient-level image analysis of CT findings of COVID-19-associated pulmonar...

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Veröffentlicht in:Clinical imaging 2022-10, Vol.90, p.11-18
Hauptverfasser: Hong, Wonju, White, P. Lewis, Backx, Matthijs, Gangneux, Jean-Pierre, Reizine, Florian, Koehler, Philipp, Bentvelsen, Robbert G., Cuestas, María Luján, Fakhim, Hamed, Jung, Jung Im, Lee, Young Kyung, Dalsania, Nishil R., Patti, Ravi Karan, Yoon, Soon Ho
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Common CT abnormalities of pulmonary aspergillosis represent a cavity with air-meniscus sign, nodule, mass, and consolidation having an angio-invasive pattern. This study aims to conduct a systematic review and an individual patient-level image analysis of CT findings of COVID-19-associated pulmonary aspergillosis (CAPA). A systematic literature search was conducted to identify studies reporting CT findings of CAPA as of January 7, 2021. We summarized study-level clinical and CT findings of CAPA and collected individual patient CT images by inviting corresponding authors. The CT findings were categorized into four groups: group 1, typical appearance of COVID-19; group 2, indeterminate appearance of COVID-19; group 3, atypical for COVID-19 without cavities; and group 4, atypical for COVID-19 with cavities. In group 2, cases had only minor discrepant findings including solid nodules, isolated airspace consolidation with negligible ground-glass opacities, centrilobular micronodules, bronchial abnormalities, and cavities. The literature search identified 89 patients from 25 studies, and we collected CT images from 35 CAPA patients (mean age 62.4 ± 14.6 years; 21 men): group 1, thirteen patients (37.1%); group 2, eight patients (22.9%); group 3, six patients (17.1%); and group 4, eight patients (22.9%). Eight of the 14 patients (57.1%) with an atypical appearance had bronchial abnormalities, whereas only one (7.1%) had an angio-invasive fungal pattern. In the study-level analysis, cavities were reported in 12 of 54 patients (22.2%). CAPA can frequently manifest as COVID-19 pneumonia without common CT abnormalities of pulmonary aspergillosis. If abnormalities exist on CT images, CAPA may frequently accompany bronchial abnormalities. •CAPA can manifest as typical to indeterminate COVID-19 pneumonia on CT without common features of pulmonary aspergillosis.•One-third of CAPA patients had an atypical appearance for COVID-19 pneumonia, and cavities were observed in one-fifth.•CAPA frequently accompanied bronchial abnormalities, whereas an angio-invasive pattern was rare.
ISSN:0899-7071
1873-4499
DOI:10.1016/j.clinimag.2022.07.003