Frontiers in Medicine (Mar 2021)

Three-Dimensional CT for Quantification of Longitudinal Lung and Pneumonia Variations in COVID-19 Patients

  • Qiuying Chen,
  • Lv Chen,
  • Shuyi Liu,
  • Luyan Chen,
  • Minmin Li,
  • Zhuozhi Chen,
  • Jingjing You,
  • Bin Zhang,
  • Shuixing Zhang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fmed.2021.643917
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8

Abstract

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Objectives: Visual chest CT is subjective with interobserver variability. We aimed to quantify the dynamic changes of lung and pneumonia on three-dimensional CT (3D-CT) images in coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) patients during hospitalization.Methods: A total of 110 laboratory-confirmed COVID-19 patients who underwent chest CT from January 3 to February 29, 2020 were retrospectively reviewed. Pneumonia lesions were classified as four stages: early, progressive, peak, and absorption stages on chest CT. A computer-aided diagnostic (CAD) system calculated the total lung volume (TLV), the percentage of low attenuation areas (LAA%), the volume of pneumonia, the volume of ground-glass opacities (GGO), the volume of consolidation plus the GGO/consolidation ratio. The CT score was visually assessed by radiologists. Comparisons of lung and pneumonia parameters among the four stages were performed by one-way ANOVA with post-hoc tests. The relationship between the CT score and the volume of pneumonia, and between LAA% and the volume of pneumonia in four stages was assessed by Spearman's rank correlation analysis.Results: A total of 534 chest CT scans were performed with a median interval of 4 days. TLV, LAA%, and the GGO/consolidation ratio were significantly decreased, while the volume of pneumonia, GGO, and consolidation were significantly increased in the progressive and peak stages (for all, P < 0.05). The CT score was significantly correlated with the pneumonia volume in the four stages (r = 0.731, 0.761, 0.715, and 0.669, respectively, P < 0.001).Conclusion: 3D-CT could be used as a useful quantification method in monitoring the dynamic changes of COVID-19 pneumonia.

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