Journal of Clinical Medicine (Jul 2022)

Multidimensional 3-Month Follow-Up of Severe COVID-19: Airways beyond the Parenchyma in Symptomatic Patients

  • Matteo Bonato,
  • Piera Peditto,
  • Nicholas Landini,
  • Alessia Fraccaro,
  • Cosimo Catino,
  • Maria Cuzzola,
  • Nicola Malacchini,
  • Francesca Savoia,
  • Nicola Roma,
  • Mauro Salasnich,
  • Martina Turrin,
  • Francesca Zampieri,
  • Giuseppe Zanardi,
  • Fabiola Zeraj,
  • Marcello Rattazzi,
  • Mario Peta,
  • Simonetta Baraldo,
  • Marina Saetta,
  • Michele Fusaro,
  • Giovanni Morana,
  • Micaela Romagnoli

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm11144046
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 14
p. 4046

Abstract

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SARS-CoV-2 may lead to a large spectrum of respiratory manifestations, including pulmonary sequelae. We conducted a single-center longitudinal study of survivors from severe COVID-19 cases who underwent a chest CT during hospitalization (CTH). Three months after being discharged, these patients were evaluated by a clinical examination, pulmonary function tests and a chest-CT scan (CTFU). Sixty-two patients were enrolled. At follow-up, 27% complained of exertional dyspnoea and 12% of cough. Dyspnoeic patients had a lower forced expiratory flow (FEF)25–75 (p = 0.015), while a CT scan (p = 0.016 showed that patients with cough had a higher extent of bronchiectasis. Lung volumes and diffusion of carbon monoxide (DLCO) at follow-up were lower in patients who had been invasively ventilated, which correlated inversely with the length of hospitalization and ground-glass extension at CTH. At follow-up, 14.5% of patients had a complete radiological resolution, while 85.5% presented persistence of ground-glass opacities, and 46.7% showed fibrotic-like alterations. Residual ground-glass at CTFU was related to the length of hospitalization (r = 0.48; p = 0.0002) and to the need for mechanical ventilation or high flow oxygen (p = 0.01) during the acute phase. In conclusion, although patients at three months from discharge showed functional impairment and radiological abnormalities, which correlated with a prolonged hospital stay and need for mechanical ventilation, the persistence of respiratory symptoms was related not to parenchymal but rather to airway sequelae.

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