Respiratory and Non-Respiratory Symptom Duration and Its Association with Severity of Radiographic Edema in Patients with COVID-19

D. Kotok, J. Rivera Robles, C. Girard, A. Kim, S. Shettigar, A. Lavina, S. Gillenwater, A. Hadeh
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Abstract

Background: Symptoms of COVID-19 are often indistinguishable from other upper and/or viral lower respiratory tract infections, with some studies suggesting higher risk for severe disease and worse outcomes in certain symptom groups compared to others. We sought to evaluate the association of specific symptom/symptom groups and their duration with severity of radiographic edema - a clinical feature that has been independently associated with poor outcomes in patients with COVID-19. Methods: We collected CXRs, demographic and clinical data from patients with a naso- and/or oropharyngeal swab positive for SARS-CoV-2 PCR visiting the ED for COVID-19-related symptoms between March and September 2020 in a large, multi-hospital healthcare system. Two independent reviewers quantified radiographic edema using the Radiographic Assessment of Lung Edema (RALE) scoring system. We collected symptom duration based on the following groups: overall (total), dyspnea, cough, constitutional (fever, chills, malaise, myalgia), nausea and/or vomiting, and diarrhea. We assessed for correlation between radiographic edema and symptom duration as continuous variables using Pearson's R and based on symptom duration quartiles using one-way analysis of variance (ANOVA). Results: 433 symptomatic patients with available CXRs were identified (median age 54, 52% female). Inter-rate agreement for RALE score was excellent (interclass correlation coefficient = 0.89, 95% CI 0.87 - 0.92, p < 0.0001). Radiographic edema associations were as following (% of patients with symptom[s], Pearson's R and respective p-value;ANOVA p-value): total duration (r = 0.19, p < 0.001;p < 0.001), constitutional (84%, r = 0.23, p < 0.00;p < 0.001), dyspnea (55%, r = 0.14, p = 0.03;p = 0.1), cough (72%, r = 0.25, p < 0.001;p < 0.001), diarrhea (22%, r = 0.02, p = 0.83;p = 0.71) and nausea and/or vomiting (17%, r = 0.04, p = 0.71;p = 0.63). Conclusions: In a multi-center study of patients presenting to the ED with symptomatic COVID-19, severity of radiographic edema was associated with overall duration of symptoms, constitutional symptoms and cough but not with duration of dyspnea, diarrhea or nausea and/or vomiting.
COVID-19患者呼吸和非呼吸症状持续时间及其与影像学水肿严重程度的关系
背景:COVID-19的症状通常与其他上呼吸道和/或病毒性下呼吸道感染难以区分,一些研究表明,与其他症状组相比,某些症状组患严重疾病的风险更高,结果更差。我们试图评估特定症状/症状组及其持续时间与影像学水肿严重程度的关联——影像学水肿是与COVID-19患者预后不良独立相关的临床特征。方法:我们收集了2020年3月至9月期间在大型多医院医疗保健系统中因covid -19相关症状前往急诊科就诊的鼻和/或口咽拭子sars -2 PCR阳性患者的cxr、人口统计学和临床数据。两名独立审核员使用肺水肿放射学评估(RALE)评分系统对影像学水肿进行量化。我们根据以下组收集症状持续时间:总体(总体)、呼吸困难、咳嗽、体质(发热、寒战、不适、肌痛)、恶心和/或呕吐和腹泻。我们使用Pearson’s R评估影像学水肿与症状持续时间作为连续变量的相关性,并使用单因素方差分析(ANOVA)评估基于症状持续时间四分位数的相关性。结果:共发现433例有症状的cxr患者(中位年龄54岁,52%为女性)。RALE评分的组间一致性极好(组间相关系数= 0.89,95% CI 0.87 - 0.92, p <0.0001)。影像学上水肿的相关性如下(有症状患者的百分比[s], Pearson’s R和各自的p值;方差分析p值):总持续时间(R = 0.19, p <0.001; p & lt;0.001),体质(84%,r = 0.23, p <0.00; p & lt;0.001)、呼吸困难(55%,r = 0.14, p = 0.03; p = 0.1),咳嗽(72%,r = 0.25, p & lt;0.001; p & lt;0.001),腹泻(22%,r = 0.02, p = 0.83;p = 0.71)和恶心和/或呕吐(17%,r = 0.04, p = 0.71;p = 0.63)。结论:在一项针对出现症状性COVID-19的急诊科患者的多中心研究中,影像学水肿的严重程度与症状的总持续时间、体质症状和咳嗽相关,但与呼吸困难、腹泻或恶心和/或呕吐的持续时间无关。
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