PLoS ONE (Jan 2024)

Lung ultrasound is associated with distinct clinical phenotypes in COVID-19 ARDS: A retrospective observational study.

  • Roy Rafael Dayan,
  • Maayan Blau,
  • Jonathan Taylor,
  • Ariel Hasidim,
  • Ori Galante,
  • Yaniv Almog,
  • Tomer Gat,
  • Darya Shavialiova,
  • Jacob David Miller,
  • Georgi Khazanov,
  • Fahmi Abu Ghalion,
  • Iftach Sagy,
  • Itamar Ben Shitrit,
  • Lior Fuchs

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0304508
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 19, no. 6
p. e0304508

Abstract

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BackgroundARDS is a heterogeneous syndrome with distinct clinical phenotypes. Here we investigate whether the presence or absence of large pulmonary ultrasonographic consolidations can categorize COVID-19 ARDS patients requiring mechanical ventilation into distinct clinical phenotypes.MethodsThis is a retrospective study performed in a tertiary-level intensive care unit in Israel between April and September 2020. Data collected included lung ultrasound (LUS) findings, respiratory parameters, and treatment interventions. The primary outcome was a composite of three ARDS interventions: prone positioning, high PEEP, or a high dose of inhaled nitric oxide.ResultsA total of 128 LUS scans were conducted among 23 patients. The mean age was 65 and about two-thirds were males. 81 scans identified large consolidation and were classified as "C-type", and 47 scans showed multiple B-lines with no or small consolidation and were classified as "B-type". The presence of a "C-type" study had 2.5 times increased chance of receiving the composite primary outcome of advanced ARDS interventions despite similar SOFA scores, Pao2/FiO2 ratio, and markers of disease severity (OR = 2.49, %95CI 1.40-4.44).ConclusionThe presence of a "C-type" profile with LUS consolidation potentially represents a distinct COVID-19 ARDS subphenotype that is more likely to require aggressive ARDS interventions. Further studies are required to validate this phenotype in a larger cohort and determine causality, diagnostic, and treatment responses.