Author:
Burian Egon,Jungmann Friederike,Kaissis Georgios A.,Lohöfer Fabian K.,Spinner Christoph D.,Lahmer Tobias,Treiber Matthias,Dommasch Michael,Schneider Gerhard,Geisler Fabian,Huber Wolfgang,Protzer Ulrike,Schmid Roland M.,Schwaiger Markus,Makowski Marcus R.,Braren Rickmer F.
Abstract
AbstractThe evolving dynamics of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) and the increasing infection numbers require diagnostic tools to identify patients at high risk for a severe disease course. Here we evaluate clinical and imaging parameters for estimating the need of intensive care unit (ICU) treatment. We collected clinical, laboratory and imaging data from 65 patients with confirmed COVID-19 infection based on PCR testing. Two radiologists evaluated the severity of findings in computed tomography (CT) images on a scale from 1 (no characteristic signs of COVID-19) to 5 (confluent ground glass opacities in over 50% of the lung parenchyma). The volume of affected lung was quantified using commercially available software. Machine learning modelling was performed to estimate the risk for ICU treatment. Patients with a severe course of COVID-19 had significantly increased IL-6, CRP and leukocyte counts and significantly decreased lymphocyte counts. The radiological severity grading was significantly increased in ICU patients. Multivariate random forest modelling showed a mean ± standard deviation sensitivity, specificity and accuracy of 0.72 ± 0.1, 0.86 ± 0.16 and 0.80 ± 0.1 and a ROC-AUC of 0.79 ± 0.1.The need for ICU treatment is independently associated with affected lung volume, radiological severity score, CRP and IL-6.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
1 articles.
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