Radiological abnormalities persist following COVID-19 and correlate with impaired health-related quality of life: a prospective cohort study of hospitalised patients.

Publication date: Feb 10, 2025

The radiological trajectory of post-COVID-19 is uncertain. We present a prospective, observational, multicentre cohort study using multimodality imaging to describe the pulmonary sequelae of patients hospitalised with COVID-19, predictors of persistent abnormal radiology and implications on health status. In survivors of COVID-19, we performed convalescent CT pulmonary angiogram and high-resolution CT imaging as part of the CISCO-19 study (ClinicalTrials. gov ID NCT04403607). This included serial blood biomarkers and patient-reported outcomes 28-60 days following discharge from hospital. Of the COVID-19 cohort, 88 (56%) patients of the COVID-19 cohort (n = 159; mean age, 55 years; 43% female) had persisting radiological abnormalities at 28-60 days postdischarge. This included ground-glass opacification (45%), reticulation/architectural distortion (30%) or mixed pattern (19%). These features were very infrequent among a group of age-matched, sex-matched and cardiovascular risk factor-matched controls (n=29). The majority of COVID-19 cohort (68%) had less than 20% persisting radiological abnormalities, with 67% demonstrating overall improvement compared with admission imaging. Older age, premorbid performance status, typical acute COVID-19 radiological features, markers of severe acute COVID-19, convalescent ICAM-1 and P-selectin were associated with persisting lung abnormalities (all p

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Concepts Keywords
Cisco Adult
Impaired Aged
Nct04403607 Computed Tomography Angiography
Pulmonary COVID-19
Radiology COVID-19
Female
Hospitalization
Humans
Lung
Male
Middle Aged
Prospective Studies
Quality of Life
Respiratory Infection
SARS-CoV-2
Tomography, X-Ray Computed

Semantics

Type Source Name
disease MESH abnormalities
disease MESH COVID-19
disease IDO quality
disease MESH sequelae
disease MESH health status
disease IDO blood
disease MESH cardiovascular risk factor

Original Article

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