At 6-month follow-up the patient was in good general conditions and asymptomatic. Signs of urinary tract infection or of renal calculosis were still detectable.
Available data indicate that a large minority of patients with COVID-19 develop ARDS, and pulmonary fibrosis is a recognized sequela of ARDS. However, the long-term pulmonary consequences of COVID-19 remain speculative. The aim of this study is to evaluate risk factors, prevalence and characteristics of POST-COVID-19 interstitial lung changes, with the unique opportunity to evaluate radiologic and pathologic correlations using HRCT and transbronchial lung cryobiopsy specimens.Methods: Here we present the preliminary data on HRCT features of POST-COVID-19 ILD. Data were collected at the time of the first interim analysis (28/11/2020) of the PCOILS trial: a prospective, multicenter national study involving 12 Italian centers (Fig 1). We collected data of consecutively hospitalized patients at baseline and then at 6 (+/-1) months after hospital discharge. HRCT changes at 6 months involving more than 5% of the total lung volume were considered significant. Patients with significant HRCT changes will undergo BAL and/or cryobiopsy and a subsequent follow-up with HRCT and lung function evaluation at 12(+/-1) and 18 (+/-1) months.Results: At the time of the present interim analysis, 524 patients from 9 centers were enrolled (enrollment is still ongoing and will end on January 31 st , 2021). Median age was 67 years (range 18-87), 330 were males (62.9%). HRCT changes were detected in 333 participants (63.5%), and in 219 (41.7%) were considered significant. 118 cases (22.5%) showed fibrotic changes including the following HRCT patterns: 7 (1.3%) probable UIP, 45 (8.5%) NSIP (with or without OP), 38 (7.2%) indeterminate, 28 (5.3%) fibrotic consolidations. Among the remaining 101 (19.2%) non fibrotic cases the radiologists described: 11 (2%) NSIP-OP, 15 (2.8%) indeterminate, 67 (12.7%) pure ground glass, 8 (1.5%) consolidations all suspected for lung cancer. Conclusions: This preliminary analysis confirms that after COVID-19 infection a large minority of patients develops interstitial lung changes mostly with NSIP-OP, indeterminate features or ground glass. The hypothesis that post-COVID-19 interstitial changes and interstitial lung diseases may share common risk factors, pathogenetic mechanisms and disease behaviour warrants further evaluations.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.