Journal of Fungi (Mar 2020)

Baseline Chest Computed Tomography as Standard of Care in High-Risk Hematology Patients

  • Jannik Stemler,
  • Caroline Bruns,
  • Sibylle C. Mellinghoff,
  • Nael Alakel,
  • Hamdi Akan,
  • Michelle Ananda-Rajah,
  • Jutta Auberger,
  • Peter Bojko,
  • Pranatharthi H. Chandrasekar,
  • Methee Chayakulkeeree,
  • José A. Cozzi,
  • Elizabeth A. de Kort,
  • Andreas H. Groll,
  • Christopher H. Heath,
  • Larissa Henze,
  • Marcos Hernandez Jimenez,
  • Souha S. Kanj,
  • Nina Khanna,
  • Michael Koldehoff,
  • Dong-Gun Lee,
  • Alina Mager,
  • Francesco Marchesi,
  • Rodrigo Martino-Bufarull,
  • Marcio Nucci,
  • Jarmo Oksi,
  • Livio Pagano,
  • Bob Phillips,
  • Juergen Prattes,
  • Athina Pyrpasopoulou,
  • Werner Rabitsch,
  • Enrico Schalk,
  • Martin Schmidt-Hieber,
  • Neeraj Sidharthan,
  • Pere Soler-Palacín,
  • Anat Stern,
  • Barbora Weinbergerová,
  • Aline El Zakhem,
  • Oliver A. Cornely,
  • Philipp Koehler

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jof6010036
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6, no. 1
p. 36

Abstract

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Baseline chest computed tomography (BCT) in high-risk hematology patients allows for the early diagnosis of invasive pulmonary aspergillosis (IPA). The distribution of BCT implementation in hematology departments and impact on outcome is unknown. A web-based questionnaire was designed. International scientific bodies were invited. The estimated numbers of annually treated hematology patients, chest imaging timepoints and techniques, IPA rates, and follow-up imaging were assessed. In total, 142 physicians from 43 countries participated. The specialties included infectious diseases (n = 69; 49%), hematology (n = 68; 48%), and others (n = 41; 29%). BCT was performed in 57% (n = 54) of 92 hospitals. Upon the diagnosis of malignancy or admission, 48% and 24% performed BCT, respectively, and X-ray was performed in 48% and 69%, respectively. BCT was more often used in hematopoietic cell transplantation and in relapsed acute leukemia. European centers performed BCT in 59% and non-European centers in 53%. Median estimated IPA rate was 8% and did not differ between BCT (9%; IQR 5−15%) and non-BCT centers (7%; IQR 5−10%) (p = 0.69). Follow-up computed tomography (CT) for IPA was performed in 98% (n = 90) of centers. In high-risk hematology patients, baseline CT is becoming a standard-of-care. Chest X-ray, while inferior, is still widely used. Randomized, controlled trials are needed to investigate the impact of BCT on patient outcome.

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