BMJ Open Respiratory Research (Jul 2024)

Lung volume measurement using chest CT in COVID-19 patients: a cohort study in Japan

  • Takanori Kanai,
  • Yukinori Okada,
  • Takanori Asakura,
  • Yukari Kato,
  • Koichi Fukunaga,
  • Tomoki Maetani,
  • Yusuke Shiraishi,
  • Masahiro Jinzaki,
  • Naoya Tanabe,
  • Toyohiro Hirai,
  • Makoto Ishii,
  • Naoki Hasegawa,
  • Takashi Shimada,
  • Ryuji Koike,
  • Shotaro Chubachi,
  • Yoshitake Yamada,
  • Kensuke Nakagawara,
  • Ho Namkoong,
  • Hideki Terai,
  • Hiromu Tanaka,
  • Soichiro Ueda,
  • Norihiro Harada,
  • Hiroki Tateno,
  • Seiya Imoto,
  • Shuhei Azekawa,
  • Shiro Otake,
  • Takahiro Fukushima,
  • Mayuko Watase,
  • Akinori Kimura,
  • Satoru Miyano,
  • Seishi Ogawa,
  • Mamoru Sasaki,
  • Shoji Suzuki,
  • Shuichi Yoshida

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjresp-2023-002234
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 1

Abstract

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Objective This study aimed to investigate the utility of CT quantification of lung volume for predicting critical outcomes in COVID-19 patients.Methods This retrospective cohort study included 1200 hospitalised patients with COVID-19 from 4 hospitals. Lung fields were extracted using artificial intelligence-based segmentation, and the percentage of the predicted (%pred) total lung volume (TLC (%pred)) was calculated. The incidence of critical outcomes and posthospitalisation complications was compared between patients with low and high CT lung volumes classified based on the median percentage of predicted TLCct (n=600 for each). Prognostic factors for residual lung volume loss were investigated in 208 patients with COVID-19 via a follow-up CT after 3 months.Results The incidence of critical outcomes was higher in the low TLCct (%pred) group than in the high TLCct (%pred) group (14.2% vs 3.3%, p<0.0001). Multivariable analysis of previously reported factors (age, sex, body mass index and comorbidities) demonstrated that CT-derived lung volume was significantly associated with critical outcomes. The low TLCct (%pred) group exhibited a higher incidence of bacterial infection, heart failure, thromboembolism, liver dysfunction and renal dysfunction than the high TLCct (%pred) group. TLCct (%pred) at 3 months was similarly divided into two groups at the median (71.8%). Among patients with follow-up CT scans, lung volumes showed a recovery trend from the time of admission to 3 months but remained lower in critical cases at 3 months.Conclusion Lower CT lung volume was associated with critical outcomes, posthospitalisation complications and slower improvement of clinical conditions in COVID-19 patients.